Malleco Viaduct

Malleco Viaduct.

The Malleco Viaduct (Spanish: Viaducto del Malleco) is a railway bridge located in central Chile, passing over the Malleco River valley, south of Collipulli in the Araucania Region. It was opened by President José Manuel Balmaceda on October 26, 1890.[1] At that time, it was the highest such bridge in the world.[specify] The Panamerican Highway passes right next to the viaduct.

A popular myth claims that the bridge was designed by Gustave Eiffel. Eiffel made a bridge proposal, but it was rejected by the Chilean authorities. It was designed by Aurelio Lastarria[2] and the construction of the bridge was awarded to Schneider et Cie. O Le Creusot, another French company. The bridge was declared a national monument in 1990.[3]

The viaduct has often been referred to as a symbol of progress,[4] among others by former President Ricardo Lagos.[5]

References

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  1. ^ "Malleco Viaduct". Entry on the UNESCO Tentative List. Retrieved 2008-07-03.
  2. ^ Henry Grattan Tyrrell, History of Bridge Engineering, Published by The author, Chicago, 1911, p. 384
  3. ^ (in Spanish) Consejo de Monumentos Nacionales de Chile: Viaducto del Malleco
  4. ^ Escalona Ulloa, Miguel; Barton, Jonathan R. (2021). "El 'Granero de Chile': Una ecología política histórica de la construcción de un paisaje de poder en Wallmapu (Araucanía)" [The 'Chilean wheat bowl': An historical political ecology of the construction of a landscape of power in Wallmapu (Araucanía)] (PDF). Norte Grande Geography Journal (in Spanish). 80. doi:10.4067/S0718-34022021000300081.
  5. ^ Lagos, Ricardo (2005). Discurso pronuncia por don Ricardo Lagos Escobar al recibir el "Premio a la libertad 2005" otorgado por la Fundación Balmaceda (in Spanish).

37°57′47″S 72°26′20″W / 37.96306°S 72.43889°W / -37.96306; -72.43889