Skip to main content

VIDEO: US bridge removed with explosive demolition

September 28, 2015
A defunct bridge has been removed in the US State of Louisiana using explosive demolition techniques. The OK Allen Bridge was removed at the weekend, following a planned blast carried out by a demolition specialist. The bridge psanned the Red River for 79 years, providing a connection between Alexandria and Pineville. Traffic was halted on the Curtis-Coleman Bridge, which carries US 71, for safety during the demolition. The steelwork of the old bridge will be removed from the river and sold for scrap, although its concrete piers still have to be demolished. Meanwhile a new structure will be constructed on the site of the old bridge as part of the Curtis-Coleman link.

Related Content

  • Riga's newest bridge improved traffic flow
    April 11, 2012
    An alliance of companies has come together to realise major infrastructure projects in Latvia including its biggest bridge. Patrick Smith reports. Riga, the Latvian capital, has the finest collection of Art Nouveau buildings in Europe and its centre is on the UNESCO World Heritage List.
  • Riga's newest bridge improved traffic flow
    May 9, 2012
    An alliance of companies has come together to realise major infrastructure projects in Latvia including its biggest bridge. Patrick Smith reports. Riga, the Latvian capital, has the finest collection of Art Nouveau buildings in Europe and its centre is on the UNESCO World Heritage List. The city of some 750,000 people (the country's total population is 2.2 million) is bounded to the south by Lithuania and to the north by Estonia, and is the second largest in Baltic States. To the east is Russia and Belarus.
  • Webuild proposes Baltimore Bridge design
    May 6, 2024
    VIDEO: The project in the US state of Maryland to replace the collapsed Francis Scott Key Bridge was made free of charge ahead of tomorrow’s state-led virtual industry forum for reconstruction of the bridge.
  • $250 million for Oregon-Washington bridge replacement
    July 10, 2025
    Oregon and Washington will provide $250 million for the Hood River-White Salmon Bridge replacement.