The medieval masonry bridge

Towards a construction history of arch bridges built before 1550

Enlarged view: Albi_PontVieux
Pont Vieux in Albi (Photo: Stefan M. Holzer)

The new project is dedicated to Europe’s remaining medieval stone arch bridges. Surprisingly, this important corpus of medieval constructions has received very little attention by building archeology so far, although the complexity and importance of bridge projects was comparable to cathedral building, and bridges attract great interest by the general public. Establishing a permanent stone arch bridge posed a serious financial and technical challenge to medieval communities, tasks ranging from stone quarrying and stoneworking, laying the foundations in the riverbed, to the final easing of the centring under the completed arches.

On-​site building archeology is the most promising approach to untangle the bridges’ building and repair history, since archival sources (although abundant) typically provide very little technical detail. In the project, detailed geometrical surveys of the bridges will be created by means of advanced technologies like laser scanning, structure-​from-motion photogrammetry employing drone-​mounted or cable-​car-suspended cameras, as well as automated feature extraction. Precise surveys permit to correlate findings and traces and to reconstruct details of the design and construction procedures. Contextualization of the individual monuments will be achieved by focusing on some particularly dense clusters of preserved bridges, notably, in Southwestern France and Central Italy.

Funding

The project is funded by the external page Swiss National Science Foundation

Team


Contact

Dr. Jasmin Schäfer
Lecturer at the Department of Architecture
  • HIT H 31.1
  • +41 44 633 82 11

Inst Denkmalpflege/ hist Bauforsch
Wolfgang-Pauli-Str. 27
8093 Zürich
Switzerland

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