Kerch railway bridge Керченский железнодорожный мост | |
---|---|
Coordinates | 45°19′42″N 36°38′15″E / 45.32844°N 36.6375°E |
Carried | Sennaya – Fontalovskaya – Chushka Spit – Kerch railway line |
Crossed | Kerch Strait |
Locale | Russian SFSR, Soviet Union |
Official name | Kerch railway bridge |
Other name(s) | Kerch Bridge |
Owner | Soviet government |
Characteristics | |
Design | Truss swing bridge |
Total length | 4.5 km (2.8 mi) |
Longest span | 55 m (180.45 ft) |
History | |
Constructed by | People's Commissariat of Railways of the Soviet Union |
Construction start | 1944 |
Opened | November 3, 1944 |
Collapsed | February 1945 |
Replaced by | Kerch Strait ferry line (1954–2020) Crimean Bridge (since 2019/20)[a] |
Location | |
The Kerch railway bridge (Russian: Керченский железнодорожный мост), also called the Kerch Bridge (Russian: Керченский мост),[1] was a short-lived Soviet Russian railway bridge across the Kerch Strait, which connects the Black Sea with the Sea of Azov. Constructed in 1944–1945 and demolished later in 1945, it connected the Chushka Spit of the Krasnodar Krai with the Kerch Peninsula of the Crimean ASSR. With a length of 4.5 km (2.8 mi),[2] it was the longest bridge in the Soviet Union.[3]
The Soviets began construction of the bridge in spring 1944 shortly after the liberation of Crimea by the Red Army. They used materials remaining from an unbuilt bridge of the occupying German forces.[2] Although it was opened for transport in autumn that year, construction was still incomplete, and December 1944 storms halted construction. By that time only part of the protective starkwaters were completed, and in February 1945 ice severely damaged the bridge, destroying the bridge pillars. Repair proposals were rejected and remnants of the bridge were disassembled afterwards.
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