Genoa-Saint George Bridge

The Genoa Saint George Bridge[1] (Italian: Viadotto Genova-San Giorgio)[2] is a motorway viaduct that crosses the Polcevera river and the districts of Sampierdarena and Cornigliano, in the city of Genoa. It was designed by architect Renzo Piano.

Genoa Saint George Bridge

Viadotto Genova-San Giorgio
Coordinates44°25′33″N 08°53′20″E
Carries4 lanes of A10 / E80
Crosses
LocaleGenoa, Italy
Maintained byAutostrade per l'Italia
Characteristics
Total length1,067 metres (3,501 ft)
Width30.80 metres (101.0 ft)
No. of lanes4 (+2 emergency lanes)
History
ArchitectRenzo Piano
Constructed by
Construction cost 202 million
Opened4 August 2020 (2020-08-04)
Inaugurated3 August 2020
Location
Sign of the works on the demolition of the Polcevera Viaduct and the construction of the bridge for Genoa.

The bridge replaces the Ponte Morandi (Polcevera Viaduct), which partially collapsed on 14 August 2018 and was completely demolished in June 2019.

The new viaduct, with its associated junctions, constitutes the initial section of the Italian A10 motorway, managed by the concessionaire Autostrade per l'Italia, which in turn is included in the European route E80.

The new bridge was inaugurated on 3 August 2020.

Features

The bridge project was carried out by the Genoese architect Renzo Piano through his Building Workshop and was officially presented on 7 September 2018 together with the President of Liguria Giovanni Toti, the Mayor of Genoa Marco Bucci and the CEOs of Autostrade per l'Italia and Fincantieri, Giovanni Castellucci and Giuseppe Bono respectively. The project includes four lanes and two emergency lanes.

Built as a mixed steel-concrete structure, it is 1,067 metres (3,501 ft) long and consists of 19 spans supported by 18 elliptical section reinforced concrete stacks with a constant shape.

The viaduct will be constantly monitored by four robots (designed by the Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia) equipped with wheels (with which they will move along the external rails of the viaduct) and articulated arms. The role of these robots is to automate inspection of the lower surface of the bridge and the cleaning of windproof barriers and solar panels.[3]

Construction

On 18 December 2018, the two companies Salini Impregilo and Fincantieri were awarded the contract for the construction of the bridge. At a cost of 202 million euros to be rebuilt in a year with the development of the executive design entrusted to Italferr while the direction and supervision the demolition and construction of the new bridge was entrusted to the RINA certification company for an amount of 14 million euros. [4][5]

On 25 June 2019, the first stone was officially laid with the casting of the base of pile 9 in the presence of various authorities. [6][7]

The casting of the concrete slab began on 6 June 2020, an operation completed in about ten days.[8]

On 21 July 2020, the mayor of Genoa Marco Bucci made official the name of the bridge and its inauguration for 3 August 2020.[9]

In any case, almost between mourning and joy, the "San Giorgio" bridge in Genoa is inaugurated with honors to italian President Sergio Mattarella and to the authorities present, therefore the last wish with the very good speech of the architect Renzo Piano.[10]

See also

References

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