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Tana Bridge

Coordinates: 70°11′54″N 28°11′58″E / 70.19833°N 28.19944°E / 70.19833; 28.19944
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Tana Bridge
Coordinates70°11′54″N 28°11′58″E / 70.19833°N 28.19944°E / 70.19833; 28.19944
Carries E6 E75
CrossesTana River
LocaleFinnmark, Norway
Characteristics
Total length260 m (850 ft)
Longest span234 m (768 ft)
History
Opened2020
Location
Map

The Tana Bridge (Norwegian: Tana bru) is a bridge that crosses the Tana River in Finnmark, Norway. It is located in a village also called Tana bru.

The bridge was opened for traffic on 15 September 2020. It is a 260 meter long cable-stayed bridge with a main span of 234 meters. It is the only bridge over the lowest 100 km of the Tana River. One nickname ('new bridge') "Nybrua", was in use in 2020 when the village once had two bridges.

Previously, there have been other bridges named Tana Bridge; one bridge was demolished, from late 2020 and into 2021.[1][2] Previously, one bridge was demolished in 1944.

The bridge glows in different colours of light at night with GVA color-changing luminaires.[3]

The bridge that existed from 1948 to 2020

[edit]
The bridge that was in operation until 2020

In December 2020, twelve metres (from the center) of the bridge, was removed permanently;[2] the final demolishment of the bridge was done [in first half of] 2021.[1]

The old bridge was 220 metres long, and the main span is 194 metres. The old bridge was opened in 1948. There was a predecessor bridge that was destroyed on November 6, 1944, as a consequence of the Liberation of Finnmark during World War II.[4][5]

The first bridge was a wooden bridge opened in 1939. It was removed every autumn, because it could not handle the ice-melt flooding in spring. In the winter an ice road was made.

See also

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References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b "Tana bru". 4 February 2021.
  2. ^ a b "Rivinga av brubæringa startet". 2 December 2020.
  3. ^ "GVA lighting". gvalighting.com. 2 February 2023.
  4. ^ "Tana bru". Store norske leksikon. Retrieved September 1, 2017.
  5. ^ "River gamle Tana bru". 2 October 2020.
[edit]
  • Chris Mann (2012) British Policy and Strategy Towards Norway, 1941-45 (Palgrave Macmillan) ISBN 9780230210226