Stavanger City Bridge Explained

Bridge Name:Stavanger City Bridge
Native Name:Stavanger Bybru, Bybrua
Native Name Lang:NO
Crosses:Straumsteinsundet
Locale:Stavanger, Norway
Design:Cantilever spar cable-stayed bridge
Material:Concrete
Spans:24
Open:31 Jan 1978
Coordinates:58.9696°N 5.7483°W

Stavanger City Bridge (Norwegian: Stavanger bybru or just Bybrua) is a cable-stayed bridge in the city of Stavanger which is in the large Stavanger Municipality in Rogaland county, Norway. The bridge has one tower and it was one of the first larger cable-stayed bridges in Norway when it opened on 31 January 1978. The bridge crosses the Straumsteinsundet strait connecting the city centre of Stavanger to the small islands of Grasholmen and Sølyst. It is the main connection to the whole the borough of Hundvåg which is a series of islands that are all interconnected by small bridges.The Stavanger City Bridge is long, the main span is, and the maximum clearance to the sea is . The reinforced concrete bridge has 24 spans.[1] [2]

The bridge has a high volume of travelers crossing it every day. This has led to the construction of the new Hundvåg Tunnel, which will connect the mainland city of Stavanger with the islands of Buøy and Hundvåg. The tunnel opened in 2020. It runs under the strait, immediately west of the bridge.

Notes and References

  1. . Retrieved 2016-04-17.
  2. Book: Norske bruer og viadukter . Merzagora . Eugenio A. . Road Viaducts & Bridges in Norway (> 500 m) . 2016-04-17.