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Victor Emmanuel Bridge says Bridge of the English à Cruet en Savoie

Victor Emmanuel Bridge says Bridge of the English

    D1006
    73800 Cruet
Owned by the Department
Pont Victor-Emmanuel dit Pont des Anglais
Pont Victor-Emmanuel dit Pont des Anglais
Pont Victor-Emmanuel dit Pont des Anglais
Pont Victor-Emmanuel dit Pont des Anglais
Pont Victor-Emmanuel dit Pont des Anglais
Pont Victor-Emmanuel dit Pont des Anglais
Pont Victor-Emmanuel dit Pont des Anglais
Pont Victor-Emmanuel dit Pont des Anglais
Pont Victor-Emmanuel dit Pont des Anglais
Pont Victor-Emmanuel dit Pont des Anglais
Pont Victor-Emmanuel dit Pont des Anglais
Pont Victor-Emmanuel dit Pont des Anglais
Pont Victor-Emmanuel dit Pont des Anglais
Pont Victor-Emmanuel dit Pont des Anglais
Pont Victor-Emmanuel dit Pont des Anglais
Pont Victor-Emmanuel dit Pont des Anglais
Pont Victor-Emmanuel dit Pont des Anglais
Pont Victor-Emmanuel dit Pont des Anglais
Pont Victor-Emmanuel dit Pont des Anglais
Pont Victor-Emmanuel dit Pont des Anglais
Pont Victor-Emmanuel dit Pont des Anglais
Pont Victor-Emmanuel dit Pont des Anglais
Pont Victor-Emmanuel dit Pont des Anglais
Pont Victor-Emmanuel dit Pont des Anglais
Pont Victor-Emmanuel dit Pont des Anglais
Pont Victor-Emmanuel dit Pont des Anglais
Pont Victor-Emmanuel dit Pont des Anglais
Pont Victor-Emmanuel dit Pont des Anglais
Pont Victor-Emmanuel dit Pont des Anglais
Pont Victor-Emmanuel dit Pont des Anglais
Pont Victor-Emmanuel dit Pont des Anglais
Pont Victor-Emmanuel dit Pont des Anglais
Pont Victor-Emmanuel dit Pont des Anglais
Pont Victor-Emmanuel dit Pont des Anglais
Pont Victor-Emmanuel dit Pont des Anglais
Pont Victor-Emmanuel dit Pont des Anglais
Pont Victor-Emmanuel dit Pont des Anglais
Pont Victor-Emmanuel dit Pont des Anglais
Pont Victor-Emmanuel dit Pont des Anglais
Crédit photo : Florian Pépellin - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1900
2000
1854
Approval of the route
1855–1856
Construction of the bridge
1860
Annexation of the Savoy
1871
Approved new route
18 décembre 1876
Railway decommissioning
19 août 1994
Historical monument classification
2017
Demolition threat
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Bridge on the river Isère, linking the national road number 6 to the departmental road number 33 (Box ZI): inscription by order of 19 August 1994

Key figures

Thomas Brassey - British entrepreneur Responsible for the construction of the bridge (1855–56).
Newman - Engineer Bridge designer with Brassey.
Pietro Paleocapa - Piedmontese Minister of Public Works The route was approved in 1854.

Origin and history

The Victor-Emmanuel Bridge, also known as the English Bridge, is a metal structure built between 1855 and 1856 at Cruet (Savoie, Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes) for the Victor-Emmanuel railway line, connecting Aix-les-Bains to Saint-Jean-de-Maurienne. Designed by the British company Thomas Brassey and engineer Newman, he crossed the Isère in a bias (45°) to match the curves of the railway line. This bridge, 160 meters long, consisted of four spans of 40 meters, stabilized by crosses of St.Andre and beams of puddled iron.

Originally, this railway bridge was annexed to France in 1860 with the Savoy, then transferred to the PLM company in 1867. By 1868, flooding problems on the left bank led to the consideration of a new route, approved in 1871 and commissioned in 1876. Disused, the bridge escaped several demolition projects (1879, 1887, 1991) before being transferred to the Conseil général de la Savoie in 1887 for road and pedestrian use, and then classified as a historic monument in 1994. Today, its conservation is threatened by its state of degradation and the risks of flooding.

Architecturally, the bridge is distinguished by its metal deck in the direction of the batteries, aligned with the current of the Isère. This provision, rare for the time, made it a unique testimony of 19th century railway engineering. The materials used — puddled iron and cast iron — and its mesh structure also make it the oldest metal bridge in France still in place. Despite its designation as historic monuments, its demolition was regularly mentioned, especially in 2017, due to the dangers it would pose in the event of a collapse.

The bridge derives its nickname from its British origins, linked to the company of Thomas Brassey, but also from its role in the Victor-Emmanuel line, named after the king of Piedmont-Sardaigne (1820–78). After 1876, he lost his railway function to a new bridge near Chamousset, marking the end of his original use. Today, although closed to traffic since 1994, it remains a symbol of Savoyard industrial heritage and a controversial preservation issue.

External links