Pont sur la Laye | |
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Coordinates | 43°55′48″N 5°45′23″E / 43.93°N 5.756389°E |
Locale | Mane, Alpes-de-Haute-Provence, France |
Characteristics | |
Design | Segmental arch bridge |
Material | Stone |
Total length | 40 m |
Width | 3.2 m |
Longest span | 11.40 m |
No. of spans | 3 |
History | |
Construction end | Roman or Romanesque period |
Location | |
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The Pont sur la Laye or Pont roman de Mane (English: Romanesque Bridge of Mane) is an old stone arch bridge across the stream Laye in the French Provence close to the town Mane.
The 40-metre-long (130 ft) and 3.2-metre-wide (10 ft) bridge features three segmental arches with a span to rise ratio of up to c. 3:1. [1] Its spans are 2.80 m, 7.90 m and 11.40; [2] the thickness of the two larger arch ribs is between one and two Roman feet, [3] making the structure one of the few Roman bridges whose ratio for rib thickness to span is lower than the commonly applied ancient standard of 1:20. [3]
The bridge was built of local limestone whose shape varies according to its function: the arches consist of voussoirs, the spandrel walls of irregular stonework. [4] The main pier is protected both upstream and downstream by large triangular cutwaters out of rectangular blocks of stone. [4] The paved roadway rises sharply from the left bank to the main arch, and then drops in a gentler gradient to the higher bank on the other side. [4] The parapet, which has been reported as partly removed by O’Connor in 1993, has been apparently repaired in the meantime. [2]
According to the Italian bridge builder Gazzola, the Pont sur la Laye dates from the end of the 1st or beginning of the 2nd century AD, [4] thus belonging to a round dozen known Roman segmental arch bridges. [1] Structurae, though, ascribes an early Romanesque origin to the structure (11th century). [2] Following the Mane homepage, the two side arches, along with their breakwaters, were added as late as the 17th century, [5] which means that the segmental arches are of a relatively late date.
Media related to Pont sur la Laye at Wikimedia Commons
Pont sur la Laye | |
---|---|
Coordinates | 43°55′48″N 5°45′23″E / 43.93°N 5.756389°E |
Locale | Mane, Alpes-de-Haute-Provence, France |
Characteristics | |
Design | Segmental arch bridge |
Material | Stone |
Total length | 40 m |
Width | 3.2 m |
Longest span | 11.40 m |
No. of spans | 3 |
History | |
Construction end | Roman or Romanesque period |
Location | |
|
The Pont sur la Laye or Pont roman de Mane (English: Romanesque Bridge of Mane) is an old stone arch bridge across the stream Laye in the French Provence close to the town Mane.
The 40-metre-long (130 ft) and 3.2-metre-wide (10 ft) bridge features three segmental arches with a span to rise ratio of up to c. 3:1. [1] Its spans are 2.80 m, 7.90 m and 11.40; [2] the thickness of the two larger arch ribs is between one and two Roman feet, [3] making the structure one of the few Roman bridges whose ratio for rib thickness to span is lower than the commonly applied ancient standard of 1:20. [3]
The bridge was built of local limestone whose shape varies according to its function: the arches consist of voussoirs, the spandrel walls of irregular stonework. [4] The main pier is protected both upstream and downstream by large triangular cutwaters out of rectangular blocks of stone. [4] The paved roadway rises sharply from the left bank to the main arch, and then drops in a gentler gradient to the higher bank on the other side. [4] The parapet, which has been reported as partly removed by O’Connor in 1993, has been apparently repaired in the meantime. [2]
According to the Italian bridge builder Gazzola, the Pont sur la Laye dates from the end of the 1st or beginning of the 2nd century AD, [4] thus belonging to a round dozen known Roman segmental arch bridges. [1] Structurae, though, ascribes an early Romanesque origin to the structure (11th century). [2] Following the Mane homepage, the two side arches, along with their breakwaters, were added as late as the 17th century, [5] which means that the segmental arches are of a relatively late date.
Media related to Pont sur la Laye at Wikimedia Commons