In Sweden the remaining ones are countible on the fingers - though later
additioned bicycle lanes are present now and when the former industrial
ditricts rebuilds to housing areas.
http://mac.abc.se/~pictor/RAIL/cykelbro.html
/M
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SUBLIMITETSAKADEMIEN
http://mac.abc.se/~pictor/
Is the railway on this photo still being used? It looks like the space
between the tracks was filled with rubber.
If you are asking for bridges where trains and other vehicles occupy the
same space, I would say that this was/is not common in Germany. Of
course there are several bridges with roads, bicycle lanes and railway
tracks next to or above each other, or former railway bridges that are
used as car, bicycle or pedestrian bridges nowadays. (For example:
http://ka.stadtwiki.net/Wintersdorfer_Brücke)
Erik
> Are combined rialway- and other kind of bridges common in other
> countries?
>
> In Sweden the remaining ones are countible on the fingers - though later
> additioned bicycle lanes are present now and when the former industrial
> ditricts rebuilds to housing areas.
>
> http://mac.abc.se/~pictor/RAIL/cykelbro.html
They are usually used only where at least one of the two kinds of traffic is
low, the cost doesn't justify a second bridge or limited space doesn't
allow a second one.
A number of them exists in the Hamburg Port area, the largest one being
Kattwykbrücke (found using Google picture search):
http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Image:Kattwykbrücke005.jpg
http://drehscheibe-online.ist-im-web.de/forum/read.php?2,3653097
Another example is Hachmannbrücke (sorry, no picture).
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Viele Grüße,
Jens Schmidt
any ideas?
--
no sig
> what might, perhaps, mean the prefix '.de'
> according to the language?
>
> any ideas?
that means "darf englisch"
Gruss & SCNR, Matthias Dingeldein
--
"Du sollst lernen!"
> what might, perhaps, mean the prefix '.de'
> according to the language?
>
> any ideas?
Ich frag mich zuerst mal, wo die drei Zeichen ".de" als Präfix
auftauchen.
Also eigentlich frage ich nicht mich, sondern meinen Vorredner.
MfG,
L.W.
Erik Burger schrieb:
> Marcus Marcusson wrote:
>> Are combined rialway- and other kind of bridges common in other
>> countries?
>>
>> http://mac.abc.se/~pictor/RAIL/cykelbro.html
>
> Is the railway on this photo still being used? It looks like the space
> between the tracks was filled with rubber.
Womit man immer noch mit Rangiergeschwindigkeit darüber fahren kann,
aber für Radfahrer, Rollstuhlnutzer usw. keine Hürden und Fallen auf
der Brücke hat.
Gruß Ralf
--
"Sicherungstechnik ist praktizierte Paranoia. Und das ist auch gut so."
Dirk Moebius in deb*
> If you are asking for bridges where trains and other vehicles occupy the
> same space, I would say that this was/is not common in Germany.
Lindaunis bridge over Schlei has tracks in the road:
<http://maps.google.de/maps?f=q&hl=de&geocode=&q=lindaunis&sll=51.151786
,10.415039&sspn=14.741016,22.807617&ie=UTF8&ll=54.583911,9.81932&spn=0.0
0166,0.004313&t=h&z=18&iwloc=addr>
<http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lindaunisbr%C3%BCcke>
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HC
<http://hc-ahlmann.gmxhome.de/> Bordkassen, Kochen an Bord, Törnberichte