Yuribey Bridge

The Yuribey Bridge (Russian: мост через Юрибей) is a 3.9-kilometre long (2.4 mi) railway bridge on the Obskaya–Bovanenkovo Line. It has two main spans of 150 metres (490 ft). The bridge was completed in 2009. It is the longest bridge above the Arctic Circle.

Bridge over Yuribey
Мост через Юрибей
Coordinates68.923333°N 70.309722°E
CarriesObskaya–Bovanenkovo Line
CrossesYuribey River
LocaleYamalo-Nenets Autonomous Okrug
Characteristics
DesignRailroad bridge
Total length3892.9 metres
Width25 metres each bridge
Longest span150 metres
No. of spans2
History
Opened2009

The bridge was constructed by Gazprom in a harsh environment including the need to build on permafrost, which required an innovative approach to the construction technique and bridge design. The bridge has to be much longer than the river width, because on permafrost, the water from melting snow does not sink into the ground, so the spring flows get quite strong.

Construction of bridge

According to media reports, the bridge was built in 349 days - in a very short timeline for such structures. In April 2009, construction of the bridge was completed, and June 4, 2009 the bridge passed the first high-ranking passengers - the presidential envoy in the Urals Federal District Nikolai Vinnichenko, Governor of Yamal Jury Neyolov, CEO Gazpromtrans Vyacheslav Tyurin . The opening of the bridge allowed to complete the construction of the railway to the Bovanenkovo and begin development of the Bovanenkovo oil and gas condensate field. The bridge consists of 107 typical spans, each 34.2 meters long, and 2 through trusses, each 110 meters long. The spans and trusses are supported by 110 bridge arms made of the metal pipes 1.2–2.4 meters in diameter filled with reinforced concrete[1]. To ensure the stability of the pillars in the permafrost were drilled hole depth of 20–40 meters.[2] total weight exceeds 30,000 tons, service life – 100 years.[1]

References

  1. "Bridge Crossing Over Yuribey River Floodplain". www.gazprom.com.
  2. Конструкция моста через Юрибей на Ямале позволит сохранить экосистему реки : ИТАР-ТАСС Урал

Records
Preceded by
?
Russia’s longest railway bridge
2009 – 2019
Succeeded by
Crimean Bridge


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