Italy To Build World's Longest Suspension Bridge 202
Rei writes "According to the BBC, Italy has just granted contracts to begin work on the world's longest suspension bridge, connecting the island of Sicily to the mainland. The nearly four kilometer-long bridge across the Messina Straits is to carry a double six-lane highway and four high-speed railway tracks. Its main span will be 3.3 kilometers long; this would over 1.5x the current record-holder, the 1991-meter Akashi-Kaikyo bridge."
Here's a hint for anyone travelling on it. (Score:5, Funny)
Re: (Score:2)
Yeah, the 'protection' check is mailed (Score:2)
No need to stop and bother the poor collectors. We mail the check every month. We wouldn't mind if you stopped by the post office and got them to deliver it in a reasonable amount of time.
Is that Prudent? (Score:2)
But, consider having a car accident or car trouble on the a bridge... it'll cause havoc. And the longer it is, the harder it will be to mediate such problems.
In either case, it's still cool.
Re:Is that Prudent? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Is that Prudent? (Score:4, Insightful)
Ok guy, you weren't born in Sicily..
Re:Is that Prudent? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Is that Prudent? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Is that Prudent? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Is that Prudent? (Score:3, Funny)
You want to update this. Since end of August, it's 23 miles all below water...
Re:Is that Prudent? (Score:2, Interesting)
As an aside my most unusual experience was heading in to the tunnel and noticing I was headed *under* a US Navy submarine.
Re:Is that Prudent? (Score:3, Informative)
I don't doubt that at all. Being two lanes in either direction it doesn't lend itself to allowing traffic to flow around them. Though, a bridge as wide as the one proposed, with the (comparatively) short distance proposed, shouldn't have as much of a problem.
As an aside my most unusual experience was heading in to the tunnel and noticing I was headed *under* a US Navy submarine.
Re:Is that Prudent? (Score:2)
The only thing special about the Messina bridge is the span -- the long causeways in America cross shallow water, and therefore can be supported at much more frequent intervals.
Re:Is that Prudent? (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Is that Prudent? (Score:2)
Re:Is that Prudent? (Score:2)
math? (Score:2, Funny)
well, that's a logically accurate statement, but so is the statement that gw bush is 1.5x smarter than your average chimpanzee
the truth is he is more like 2x as smart, and same with the bridges
Re:math? (Score:3, Informative)
duh.
Re:math? (Score:2)
Re:math? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:math? (Score:2)
After seeing the National Geographic show "Chimps: The Dark Side",
I think GWB has a lot in common with the chimpanzee.
Re:math? (Score:2)
electrical transmission lines (Score:2)
Linux role - any? (Score:4, Funny)
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Linux role - any? (Score:2)
Re:Linux role - any? (Score:2)
Just imagine how that could relieve congestion in the rush hour!
Re:Linux role - any? (Score:2)
Can it block the (stsp)state trooper smokey protocol?
* groan * (Score:2)
Almost there... (Score:2, Funny)
Cost vs Bay Bridge retrofit (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Cost vs Bay Bridge retrofit (Score:4, Insightful)
In a lot of places you will see bridges built next to each other - sometimes it's cheaper to build a whole new bridge instead of tacking another bit on the side.
The cost of stuff in the Bay area are most likely irrelevant to the project, since stuff will come in from elsewhere.
Re:Cost vs Bay Bridge retrofit (Score:2)
Re:Cost vs Bay Bridge retrofit (Score:3, Insightful)
Italy doesn't have to deal with CalTrans, or the fifty gazillion other state and Bay Area agencies with noses in the project. I believe California's nuthouse approval processes have long eclipsed even the famed Italian bureaucracy.
Re:Cost vs Bay Bridge retrofit (Score:2)
Re:Cost vs Bay Bridge retrofit (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Cost vs Bay Bridge retrofit (Score:2)
Blame the east bay. They're to blame for this stupid mess.
Odd are it was spearheaded by some hummer driving morons from Blackhawk. But don't hold me to that.
Re:Cost vs Bay Bridge retrofit (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Cost vs Bay Bridge retrofit (Score:3, Insightful)
This is Sicily. You know who's going to be providing the local labour? The construction firms you're going to find down there are, shall we say, family businesses.
Might not work out all that cheap, but at least they won't have to worry about union trouble ;-)
Re:Cost vs Bay Bridge retrofit (Score:2)
Pan
Re:Cost vs Bay Bridge retrofit (Score:2)
Re:Cost vs Bay Bridge retrofit (Score:2)
You give the reason in your own question.
seismic retrofit
Italy doesn't have to worry about Earthquakes. The seismic retrofit is really the building of an entirely new bridge to replace the old one.
Re:Cost vs Bay Bridge retrofit (Score:3, Informative)
Some information [usgs.gov]
Re:Cost vs Bay Bridge retrofit (Score:2)
Re:Cost vs Bay Bridge retrofit (Score:2)
Rumor on the street is that Italy openly embraced Linux/OSS which led to the cost savings. I also heard that Open Office led to productivity gains, and using Gnome for an interface made their employees more or less immune to the influenza virus.
election campaign (Score:5, Insightful)
So he pulls out the old bridge plans like he did the last time and the time before.
Don't expect to travel to Sicily on try feet too soon.
Re:election campaign (Score:2)
It's also a totally useless bridge, considering the state of road and railway communications across souther Italy. Believe me: the Messina striat is scarely the bottleneck, except perhaps for reaching the major cities in Sicily (or conversely when traving from the major cities in Sicily).
Re:election campaign (Score:3, Informative)
the bridge was planned a lot of time ago, and projects and deployment began right after the last elections results. So it is not an electoral move.
Actually yes, it was an electoral move. But it was an electoral move two elections ago.
The messina striat is quite efficient, and the status of high-traffic roads in south italy is not as bad as you are trying to present. I personally saw the Salerno-Reggio Calabria and it's completely new. Also in sicily from messina to palermo the road is perfect. Is tha
Re:election campaign (Score:4, Informative)
A bridge costing 3,880,000,000 Euro to save 20 minutes
Attacking the Messina Bridge is like attacking the Red Cross. This is plain even to an idiot who is completely useless, even though he is useful to the interests of someone.
After the ad hoc laws, we now have the ad hoc construction work.
The bridge is of no use to the Italians, including those from Reggio and from Messina, divided by nature for a million years. To go from Salerno to Reggio Calabria, it takes 48 hours. Then the bridge will allow you to save 20 minutes to get to Sicily.
The country has other priorities that are real. Motorways and railways are in an abysmal state.
The 3,880,000,000 Euro are ours. Why should we spend them for a useless construction? Our employees, incapable of managing our public debt, before spending the money for the bridge should explain how we will get a return on the money, and explain the utility, the environmental impact and the do-ability.
A 3,000 metre bridge with an aerodynamic profile, has never been constructed up to now.
There's no guarantee that it will stand up, especially if you consider that it's in a zone of major seismic activity (remember the Messina earthquake?) and with incredibly strong currents.
On this point refer to the interview with the Professor of architectural construction, Massimo Majowiecki. Some of his conclusions are given here.
"The Delegations of Superintendence of ANAS {Roads}, of FF.SS {railways} and the Ministry of Public
Works, in July 1995 conclude: " that the Progetto di Massima Definitivo {the final project plan} presented in December 1992, even given the undoubted value of the information supplied, it is not yet possible to indicate which project is definitely the one to be developed into a construction project, to be translated into the building of a bridge and a global passage across."
In present conditions, the technical uncertainties stil remain...."
But the bridge will create jobs and contracts and will get the approval of the Confindustria {employers' organisation} and of the Unions. Perhaps it would be better to get them to dig holes and fill them in again. It's a useless activity, but at least it wouldn't cause harm.
Beppe Grillo
Re:election campaign (Score:2)
Imagine having 4km of nice bridge to fish from...
Re:election campaign (Score:2)
I'll not discount Berlusconi own pride
what else he could be remembered for?
Supposed to finish in 2012 (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Supposed to finish in 2012 (Score:3, Funny)
By then, i'm sure they could bridge it out.
Politican vapourware (Score:2, Insightful)
They don't have the money to support it.
None seems to be really interested in such a thing (not even in Sicilia).
Scientists warn against it: the Etna volcano is just 50 Km far from there.
But stock quotes of the company that should build the bridge are going up any time someone quotes the bridge.
Re:Politican vapourware (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Politican vapourware (Score:2)
Ofcourse the same thing was said about the Channel Tunnel [wikipedia.org] [Wikipedia] (linking the UK to France) when it was built in the early 90's. Apparently there wasn't enough money to build the 50 km undersea tunnel, there was no need for it and it would probably collapse.
Not all huge, ground-breaking projects fail and while th
Re:Political vapourware (Score:2, Insightful)
It's not actually the same situation.
Do you know how many people and tons of goods used to cross the channel by ship?
A couple of magnitude orders more than the Canale di Messina!
The distance between the two sides is 20 times larger in the British Channel.
And, moreover, there is no active volcano snoring close to the tunnel.
I'd spend those money and efforts in something more useful or less useless at least.
Re:Political vapourware (Score:2)
"The distance between the two sides is 20 times larger in the British Channel."
Don't you mean 20 times smaller than the Channel Tunnel?
The Channel Tunnel is approximatly 50 km's long wheras the proposed bridge will be just under 4 km's long (and only 3.3 km's over the main span).
Also, while the area does get earthquakes (although less frequently than in the area of Japan where the current longest bridge in the world is located), I am unsure exactly which 'ative' volcano you are referring to.
Just for the record (Score:3, Funny)
I actually crossed them both at the same day a few years ago. I wonder if that entitles me to a place in the Guiness book of records
In corporate Italia... (Score:2)
Also, an enormous amount of public money has been dumped for decades into the southern regions, ("Cassa per il Mezzogiorno") to improve its economic situation, ending up to serve the interests of the mafia controlled building firms.
As reported here [onlyinitaly.com] and as most Italians recall, a couple years ago a guy called Pietro Lunardi said that things lik
Previous attempts have failed (Score:4, Informative)
Several previous attempts of multibillion-dollar, EU-funded projects in that region have failed somewhere between Rome and Palermo. Money, people, and concrete have disappeared and there were never any witnesses. Hope things have changed.
4 railway lines and 6 auto lanes (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:4 railway lines and 6 auto lanes (Score:2)
Usually in the US trains get their own seperate bridge.
Huh 4km aka 2.5m long total (FTFA)? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Huh 4km aka 2.5m long total (FTFA)? (Score:3, Interesting)
i love it and used to walk it on labor day every year with my parents when i was younger and lived up up north. im a troll, so not that far up north, but still the mighty mac is a
With a BIG grain of salt... (Score:3, Insightful)
Please be aware that this is a plan that's been around for more than twenty years now, and it's not feasible. The wind is just too strong (been there last month, I saw it), the zone is a sismic one and generally noone cares anyway, because the roads that would bring people to the bridge (the infamous Salerno-Reggio Calabria) are ancient to be kind and generally a wreck.
Be also aware that this is election time, and our prime citizen Berlusconi will lose. So he bring out this old project, to gain some thousands of votes, and will leave it to the next administration to realize. Same old story...
(see the Mose project to protect Venice from floodings)
Re:With a BIG grain of salt... (Score:2)
I highly doubt that it's impossible to engineer a bridge to sustain whatever winds may be in the area.
It's the highest (Score:2)
One nation? (Score:3, Insightful)
I wonder if Mr. Berlusconi has heard of a place called Sardinia [initaly.com].
Re:One nation? (Score:2)
sshhh!
he could hear you and plan a tunnelnusefull (Score:3, Interesting)
Sicilian mafia dies unless it halts the project! (Score:2, Interesting)
With this bridge, Sicily would be integrated into Italy and central government and police would have much better access to the island to keep the orde
What about the Danish "Storebaeltsbro"? (Score:2)
When you visit Messina (Score:2)
A 25 hour train ride from Paris over the Alps with a beautiful Amherst prospective Italian teacher got me some basic grammar, we stayed with her Italian teacher.
Messina, on the tip of the mainland has a beautiful Carravagio museum with a massive work that shows gorgeous gold highlights (Carravagio's specialty) with artful lighting.
I recommend going before the bridge is completed, assuming it is a train bridge as well. The reason
The American perspective (Score:3, Funny)
They are going to put it between Ketchican, Alaska (population 14500) and Gravina Island (population 50).
Sicilians may have invented organized crime, but the US Congress has perfected it.
Longest suspension bridge in Japan? (Score:2)
Re:Suspension bridge (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Suspension bridge (Score:2)
It's about 2500 meters
http://www.gefyra.gr/English/framesetbig.htm [gefyra.gr]
I am no bridge expert but the two bridges seem similar in design...
Re:Suspension bridge (Score:2)
Re:Wow.. if only we americans didn't spend on defe (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Wow.. if only we americans didn't spend on defe (Score:2, Funny)
That's a lot of places to throw bodies off...
Re:Wow.. if only we americans didn't spend on defe (Score:2, Insightful)
hi, i write from italy, emh, the bridge is new, is not rebuilded after the WWII, its a shame that the US Gov spent too much money in army to make war all around the world instead spending in istruction and story book.
BWT the bridge is not a good things, many of the people living in Sicilia and Calabria don't want it
Re:Wow.. if only we americans didn't spend on defe (Score:2)
Not to knock your poor English, but he wasn't implying that he thought y'all were trying to rebuild the bridge. He was just trying to argue that if you Italians had spent more money on your military in WWII, you wouldn't have lost to begin with, and therefore wouldn't have had to rebuild the
Re:Wow.. if only we americans didn't spend on defe (Score:2)
Re:Wow.. if only we americans didn't spend on defe (Score:2)
Especially not punctuation
Re:Critical Failure (Score:2)
Right, because Japan has neither of those [wikipedia.org] things [wikipedia.org] to worry about! wtf? what a dumb argument.
Re:Critical Failure (Score:2, Insightful)
How would they prevent against this?
Exactly the same way they prevent terrorist attacks against anything else - a combination of physical security and intelligence. Is it infallible? Of course not. But everything, everywhere is vulnerable to terrorist attacks, nothing new there.
Re:Critical Failure (Score:5, Insightful)
How would they prevent against this? It seems such a bridge has two critical failure points at both ends and one or more in the middle.
I know they have water to cross, so its size doesn't appear to be the motivation, as say for the tallest building etc. but I think these are issues which (sadly) need to be considered.
Jesus Christ on a pogo stick! Can we even mention constructing a structure larger than a Taco Bell without someone saying "Well, that's a nice idea, but The Terrorists could just blow it up." Here's a whack from The Reality Stick for you. The Terrorists can (and will) Blow Stuff Up. They're generally going to do it where there are a lot of people in order to maximize Body Count (aka Terror). Fortunately, for The Terrorists, the world is a target rich environment because for the past 10,000 years people have not advanced "Well, that's a nice idea, but The Terrorists could just blow it up" as a credible reason to abandon major projects. A new world's longest bridge or World's Blankest Blank will be yet another target and life will go on.
Now, I'm not advancing this bridge as a good idea. There may be, and probably are, many legitimate reasons why it should be built differently or even not at all. However, suggesting that every new structure should be terrorist proof is delusional.
Peter
Re:Critical Failure (Score:2)
Just you wait! In five years, I'll have an even blanker blank, and then we'll see who's the terrorist magnet here!
Re:Critical Failure (Score:2)
They gotta eat somewhere...
Mafia target (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Mafia target (Score:2)
Build a bridge once, and you launder money for a decade. But if you blow it up and get the contract to rebuild you can be laundering money for the rest of your life.
Re:Critical Failure (Score:2)
FUD.
Please read the constitution. Please read your bill of rights. Please get some perspective. Please understand that when people decide to build a bridge, it's very sad that the only thing you can come up with is FUD.
Re:Critical Failure (Score:2)
Re:Critical Failure (Score:3, Funny)
Beer kills more people than terrorists.
George Bush kills more people than terroists (of course some people think he is a terrorist.)
Terrorists kill people in particularly nasty ways, and get heaps of "the oxygen of publicity".
However, the Mafia (Based in Sicily) almost certaily kill more people than the terrorists, and if the terrorists mess with this bridge, then I am sure the Mafia will "make them an offer they can't refuse"
Re:Critical Failure (Score:2)
Ahhh, you mean like all those other major suspension bridges that have been easily attacked and destroyed by the omnipresent Terrorist in the past few years.
Oh, wait.
-PS
Re:Not the Japanese... (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Not the Japanese... (Score:2)
Re:Not the Japanese... (Score:2)
Sorry, no its not. Its a cable stayed [wikipedia.org] bridge.
Re:French claims to have the longuest one (Score:2)
2) The viaduc de Millau is not a suspension bridge in the first place, and this article is about suspension bridges.