Skip to main content

Germany plans replacement for A40 Neuenkamp Duisburg Bridge

Germany’s motorway authority has unveiled plans for an 802m cable stayed replacement bridge taking the A40 over the Rhine River near Duisburg. The state owned authority Deges - Deutsche Einheit Fernstraßenplanungs- und -bau - will oversee the project that includes an eight-lane expansion of the A40, all in the industrial Rhur region.
March 6, 2018 Read time: 2 mins
Germany’s longest cable stayed bridge, the proposed replacement A40 Neuenkamp Duisburg crossing (photo: Keipke Architekten)
Germany’s motorway authority has unveiled plans for an 802m cable stayed replacement bridge taking the A40 over the Rhine River near Duisburg.


The state owned authority Deges - Deutsche Einheit Fernstraßenplanungs- und -bau - will oversee the project that includes an eight-lane expansion of the A40, all in the industrial Rhur region.

"We hope that there will be a planning approval decision in 2019. Only then can we start with the tenders,” said Karl-Heinz Aukschun, Deges project manager.

If so, construction could start in 2020 and the bridge open by 2023 after which the old bridge will be demolished. The entire project including highway expansion should be complete by 2026.

Estimated cost will be €340 million for the bridge alone, whose main span between the two piers will be 380m, making it Germany’s longest cable stayed bridge.

According to Deges, the bridge will carry 126,000 vehicles a day by 2030, although the bridge’s capacity will be 150,000 vehicles daily. Lifespan will be up to 100 years.

The existing 775m-long Neuenkamp Bridge was completed in 1971 and was designed to carry 30,000 vehicles daily. However, for several years it has been carrying around 110,000 vehicles a day, including 11,000 trucks, according to media reports.

The old bridge’s decks were resurfaced 10 years ago. But since then, the structure has been closed on occasions for emergency welding to repair cracks. At other times, weight restrictions have been put in place for trucks.

Questions have already been raised about land acquisition for the A40 highway expansion as well as over the steel to be used for the bridge. Critics have wanted to know if the steel will come from Germany or China.

Udo Pasderski, Deges area manager, said steel will be purchase that gives best value for the citizens. "We always have to accept the most cost-effective offer in Europe-wide tenders," he said.

However, construction of the A1 Rhine bridge near Leverkusen, which will probably begin in 2019, will use Chinese steel.

Related Content

  • Tanzania’s work on East Africa’s multi-national road project
    November 28, 2022
    Tanzania is kick-starting construction work on the missing link in East Africa's multinational road
  • Tender evaluation nears for Croatia’s Peljeski Bridge Project
    September 22, 2017
    Croatia’s roads agency Hrvatske Ceste will soon start evaluating tenders for the controversial Peljeski Bridge project, according to national media. Bids for construction of the four-lane 2.4km long bridge have been submitted by the China Road and Bridge Corporation, Austria's Strabag as well as consortia headed by Italy’s Astaldi and the Turkish company Ictas. The bridge will connect Croatian territory by traversing the Adriatic Sea’s Mali Ston Bay.
  • Australian bridge slides into position
    July 18, 2012
    A heavy rail crossing as part of Australia's EastLink motorway demanded great ingenuity and careful planning Most of the 88 bridges on the EastLink tolled motorway in, Melbourne, Australia were kept as simple and straightforward as possible. Contractor Thiess John Holland (TJH) developed its own precast yard 150km from the city, which provided many of the prefabricated materials required for the structures. This offered speed and economy while logistics and sequencing were vital for their erection. But the
  • Formwork innovations help bridge building
    July 7, 2015
    A series of formwork developments are helping with challenging bridge construction projects around the world - Mike Woof writes In the Polish city of Krakow, a cost-effective cable stayed bridge is being constructed using a balanced cantilever technique. The current expansion of the Krakow metropolitan railway network (KST) requires the building of a crossing of the Krakow-Plaszow railway junction. Ensuring that daily rail operations remained unaffected during the construction of the 252m long crossing w