Skip to main content

Bavarian Autobahn bridge repairs

Austrian contractor STRABAG is heading a consortium that will carry out bridge upgrades on the busy A9 Autobahn connecting Nuremburg with Munich in Bavaria, southern Germany. The eight bridges between the Nuremburg/Feucht interchange and the Hipoltstein junction will be demolished and replaced with new structures. The deal is worth € 38 million and will be handled by the consortium comprising STRABAG, subdivision Bavaria North, and Ed Züblin, Subdivision Bridge Construction. The client for the project is Au
March 11, 2019 Read time: 2 mins

Austrian contractor STRABAG is heading a consortium that will carry out bridge upgrades on the busy A9 Autobahn connecting Nuremburg with Munich in Bavaria, southern Germany. The eight bridges between the Nuremburg/Feucht interchange and the Hipoltstein junction will be demolished and replaced with new structures. The deal is worth € 38 million and will be handled by the consortium comprising STRABAG, subdivision Bavaria North, and Ed Züblin, Subdivision Bridge Construction. The client for the project is Autobahndirektion Nordbayern, the motorway authority for northern Bavaria.

The project is needed as the bridges are amongst the oldest remaining on Germany’s Autobahn network and can no longer cope with the volume of traffic or the weight of modern heavy trucks.

The work includes renovation works on the roads beneath three of the bridges as well as the demolition and new construction of a noise protection wall near Altenfelden. The package of works also includes the construction of temporary ramps and roads to the construction sites and a provisional acceleration strip at the Allersberg junction.

Work will be carried out round the clock from Monday-Saturday, with construction being divided into two phases. Work on the northward-bound lanes will take place from March to November 2019. After the winter break, construction will proceed on the southward-bound lanes from May to November 2020. The project is due for completion by the end of 2020.

Building the bridge structures will involve the excavation of a total of around 74,000tonnes of earth and laying around 21,000tonnes of asphalt. Due to the ground conditions, four of the bridges will be set on large bored piles with a diameter of 1.2m and the noise protection wall will be built on large bored piles with a diameter of 620mm or 750mm.

Related Content

  • Pūhoi-to-Warkworth motorway project
    September 25, 2020
    After a hiatus because of the COVID-19 lockdown, work has restarted on what will be one of New Zealand’s most visually impressive motorways. Andrew Thackwray, senior manager for project delivery for Waka Kotahi, the New Zealand Transport Agency, explains
  • Increasing demand for geosynthetics reinforcement
    May 3, 2012
    Geosynthetics have a wide variety of uses and these include providing extra strength in highway construction. Demand for geosynthetics in the United States alone is projected to increase 4.4% per year through to 2010 to more than 727 million m². Geosynthetics, used worldwide in the highway sector for strengthening, include geotextiles, geomembranes, geonets, geogrids, geosynthetic clay liners, preformed geocomposites, geocells and geofoams. The US advances will be fuelled by a recovery in nonbuilding constr
  • Increasing demand for geosynthetics reinforcement
    April 16, 2012
    Demand for geosynthetics in the United States alone is projected to increase 4.4% per year through to 2010 to more than 727 million m². Geosynthetics, used worldwide in the highway sector for strengthening, include geotextiles, geomembranes, geonets, geogrids, geosynthetic clay liners, preformed geocomposites, geocells and geofoams. The US advances will be fuelled by a recovery in nonbuilding construction. Additionally, geosynthetics will continue to increase their use in a wider range of applications
  • Technology and collaboration bring massive time savings
    December 2, 2021
    The link between any major city and its airport is a crucial one. In Auckland, New Zealand, State Highway 20B connects the city of 1.6 million people with the rest of the nation and the international airport, one of only two roads leading there