Supply Chain Council of European Union | Scceu.org
Transportation

Rotterdam installs new bridge to assist rail freight

A new railway bridge that will form a key link in the Port of Rotterdam’s railway line and the new Theemswegtracé branch has been successfully installed.

The arch
bridge was in place on 30 May and the new part of the railway spans over 4km in
length. The first trains are expected to travel down the Theemswegtracé in late
2021.

The new
arch bridge spanning the Thomassentunnel and the A15 and N15 motorways.

The first
bridge along this route – spanning Rozenburgsesluis – was installed on 4 April
2020.

The
Theemswegtracé is a €300 million ($335 million) solution to the problems associated
with the Calandbrug near Rozenburg, according to the Port.

The steel
vertical-lift bridge for rail and road traffic in the Port of Rotterdam area is
the connecting link in the Betuwe Route to the European hinterland. For ocean
shipping, the vertical-lift bridge forms the gateway to the Brittanniëhaven.

“The
Theemswegtracé is in line with the Port Authority’s policy to increase the
sustainability of Rotterdam’s connections with the hinterland and raise
efficiency in rail, road and shipping traffic. In view of the forecast growth
in rail freight transport and the increase in shipping movements from and to
Brittanniëhaven, the Port Authority believes that rail transport could run into
capacity problems. The construction of the Theemsweg Route resolves this
bottleneck,” said Ronald Paul, COO of the Port of Rotterdam Authority.

SaVe is a
construction consortium made up of BESIX, Dura Vermeer, Mobilis, Hollandia and
Iemants and is constructing the substructure of the Theemsweg Route, a 4km
stretch of concrete viaduct and two steel arched bridges, commissioned by the
Port of Rotterdam Authority.

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