Skip to main content

Flatcar bridges for North Carolina

The temporary bridges made from disused railway flat cars are being supplied and installed by Innovative Bridge Company based in the US state of Mississippi.
By David Arminas February 26, 2025 Read time: 1 min
The Innovative Bridge Company sells or rents flat railcar decks up to 27.5m-long (image from a NCDOT video; see below for link)

North Carolina Department of Transportation is installing retired railroad flatcars as temporary bridges to replace bridges that were damaged by Hurricane Helene last September.

The bridges are being supplied and installed by Innovative Bridge Company, based in Petal, a small city of around 11,000 in the state of Mississippi. IBC has so far installed more than 40 railcar bridges in seven counties, according to local media reports.

IBC said that it typically installs up to 200 such bridges annually, from Texas to Pennsylvania. However, the order This was its first disaster response job.

The railcar bridges, paved and with railings installed, are third of the cost of a typical temporary bridge. The NCDOT said it expects to have all the temporary bridges in place by the end of March and all damaged bridges rebuilt within two years.

The Innovative Bridge Company sells or rents flat railcar decks up to 90-feet-lonig (27.5m), specialising in short county-level bridges and bridges for private customers.

A short video of the work in North Carolina is available by clicking here.

Related Content

  • Financial close for Louisiana’s Calcasieu Bridge
    August 19, 2024
    Sacyr said that the project is the company’s first transportation infrastructure private-public partnership contract in the US and calls for a total of $2.27 billion in construction investment.
  • US bridges need repair, ARTBA reports
    March 26, 2021
    ARTBA reports that 220,000 US bridges need repair.
  • VIDEO captures unloved, unowned Reynolds Bridge reduced to rubble
    May 18, 2015
    There was a big bang in a small town in the US state of Pennsylvania this month when a fragmentation explosion brought down the 100-year-old Reynolds Road Bridge. It was the end to the unloved bridge near Factoryville, population around 1,500. Factoryville is notable for a lack of factories ever since the one and only plant, a wool-into-cloth factory, closed down several years after it opened in the 1800s. Local residents were not sorry to see the felling of the 40m long, reinforced concrete arch deck
  • North Carolina highway contract awarded
    August 16, 2019
    A contract for a 12km highway upgrade project has been awarded to a joint venture by the NC Department of Transportation (NCDOT). Fluor says it will book the US$263 million contract in the third quarter of 2019. The project will widen I-26 from two lanes to four lanes in each direc