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List of vertical-lift bridges

This is a list of vertical-lift bridges.

Australia

Belgium

  • Budabrug<sup></sup> – road – zeekanaal Brussel-Schelde – opened 1955
  • Europabrug<sup></sup> – road – zeekanaal Brussel-Schelde – opened 1972
  • Verbrandebrug<sup></sup> – road – zeekanaal Brussel-Schelde – opened 1968
  • Humbeekbrug<sup></sup> – road – zeekanaal Brussel-Willebroek – opened 1968
  • Brielenbrug<sup></sup> – road – zeekanaal Brussel-Schelde – opened 1968
  • Ringbrug<sup></sup> – road – zeekanaal Brussel-Willebroek – opened 1986
  • Vredesbrug<sup></sup> – road – zeekanaal Brussel-Schelde – opened 1952

Brazil

Canada

China

France

  • Pont Gustave-Flaubert – crossing the Seine at Rouen, this lift bridge is the highest vertical-lift bridge in Europe, allowing ships up to 55 m tall to pass under it. It is 670 m long, with a span of 116 metres. A striking design feature, the two road sections are mounted outside the central towers. The bridge was designed by François Gillard and Aymeric Zublena and opened to road traffic on 25 September 2008. It is named after the author Gustave Flaubert who was born in Rouen.
  • Pont de Recouvrance – over the river Penfeld in Brest – road & tramway
  • Pont Levant de Crimée<sup></sup> – over the Ourcq Canal; the last surviving vertical-lift bridge in Paris
  • The Pont Jacques Chaban-Delmas, spanning the River Garonne in Bordeaux, was opened in March 2013. The central lift span is 117m long and can be lifted vertically up to 53m to let tall ships pass underneath. The bridge is 575m long with the central lift span weighing around 2,600 tonnes. Its width varies from 32 to 45m and it will be used by cars, trams, cyclists and pedestrians. It can handle 43,000 vehicles a day and will reduce traffic congestion in Bordeaux. Structurae gives a length of 110 m for the lift span, making it probably the longest vertical-lift span in Europe.

Germany

  • in Hamburg, from 1934, demolished in 2018
  • Karnin Lift Bridge, Mecklenburg-Vorpommern
  • , a pair of vertical-lift bridges in Hamburg, have a lift span 100 m long, one of the longest in Europe It's opened in a regular schedule every two hours.

India

New Pamban Bridge – This railway bridge on Pamban channel opened in 2025, is located in the Indian state Tamil Nadu, and will connect mainland India with Rameshwaram town on Pamban Island. It spans a length of and includes a vertical lifting section. It is the first vertical lift sea bridge in all of South Asia.

Indonesia

  • Ampera Bridge – an automobile lift bridge located in Palembang that cross the Musi River. This bridge is still used by road vehicles but since 1970 never lift its road deck again. Eventually its counterweights removed in 1990.

Italy

  • Ponte Due Giugno<sup></sup> – road – Fiumicino, Rome– rebuilt in 1945

Japan

  • Chikugo River Lift Bridge – connecting Ōkawa, Fukuoka and Saga, Saga. Constructed as a railway bridge in 1935, it is 507 m long, with a central span 24 m long that weighs 48 t and rises 23 m. The railway closed in 1987, but the bridge reopened to pedestrians in 1996 and was designated an important cultural property in 2003.

The Netherlands

Romania/Bulgaria

  • Danube Bridge, connecting both countries over Danube, between Giurgiu and Russe. Opened on 20 June 1954, the bridge is 2,223.52 m (7,295.0&nbsp;ft) long and has a central lift-bridge (85 m) to allow the free-passing oversized boats passage.

Russia

Sweden

Ukraine

United Kingdom

United States

Alabama

  • Naheola Bridge – Built in 1934, a steel lift bridge spanning the Tombigbee River between Choctaw and Marengo counties, notable for rail and automotive traffic sharing the same surface until its closure to automotive traffic in 2001.

Arkansas

California

Connecticut

Delaware

Florida

Georgia

Illinois

Kentucky

Louisiana

Maine and New Hampshire

Massachusetts

Michigan

Minnesota and Wisconsin

Missouri

  • ASB Bridge – A two-deck bridge over the Missouri River in Kansas City. From 1911 to 1987, handled both trains and cars, on separate decks, and still carries railroad traffic.
  • Harry S. Truman Bridge – Opened in 1945, a single-track railroad bridge over the Missouri River, in Kansas City.

Montana

New York City and northern New Jersey

New York (upstate)

  • Adam Street Lift Bridge – A two-lane vehicle and pedestrian bridge spanning the Erie Canal in Lockport. Built in 1917, it has a span of . It was closed in 2011 and left in the raised position.
  • Adams Basin Lift Bridge, also called the Washington Street Lift Bridge – A two-lane vehicle and pedestrian bridge spanning the Erie Canal in Adams Basin, near Spencerport, built in 1912, with a span of .
  • Eagle Harbor Lift Bridge – A two-lane vehicle and pedestrian bridge spanning the Erie Canal near Albion, built in 1910, with a span of .
  • Exchange Street Lift Bridge – A two-lane vehicle and pedestrian bridge spanning the Erie Canal in Lockport, built in 1915, with a span of .
  • Fairport Lift Bridge, also called the Main Street Lift Bridge – A two-lane vehicle and pedestrian bridge spanning the Erie Canal in Fairport, built in 1914, and notable due to its irregular, ten-sided structure, as well as the 32-degree angle at which it crosses the canal. The bridge has a span of .
  • Gasport Lift Bridge, also called the Hartland Road Lift Bridge – A two-lane vehicle and pedestrian bridge spanning the Erie Canal in Gasport, built in 1913, with a span of .
  • Green Island Bridge – Opened in 1981, with a simply supported plate girder bridge span supported by a cross member.
  • Holley Lift Bridge, also called the East Avenue Lift Bridge – A two-lane vehicle and pedestrian bridge spanning the Erie Canal in Holley, built in 1911, with a span of .
  • Hulberton Road Lift Bridge – A two-lane vehicle and pedestrian bridge spanning the Erie Canal in Hulberton, built in 1913, with a span of .
  • Ingersoll Street Lift Bridge – A two-lane vehicle and pedestrian bridge spanning the Erie Canal in Albion, built in 1911, with a span of .
  • Knowlesville Lift Bridge – A two-lane vehicle and pedestrian bridge spanning the Erie Canal in Ridgeway, near Medina, built in 1910, with a span of .
  • Main Street Lift Bridge (Albion, New York) – A two-lane vehicle and pedestrian bridge spanning the Erie Canal in Albion, built in 1914, with a span of .
  • Main Street Lift Bridge (Brockport, New York) – A two-lane vehicle and pedestrian bridge spanning the Erie Canal in Brockport, built in 1915, with a span of .
  • Medina Lift Bridge, also called the Prospect Avenue Lift Bridge – A two-lane vehicle and pedestrian bridge spanning the Erie Canal in Medina, built in 1914, with a span of .
  • Middleport Lift Bridge, also called the Main Street Lift Bridge – A two-lane vehicle and pedestrian bridge spanning the Erie Canal in Middleport, built in 1915, with a span of .
  • Park Avenue Lift Bridge – A two-lane vehicle and pedestrian bridge spanning the Erie Canal in Brockport, built in 1914, with a span of .
  • Spencerport Lift Bridge, also called the Union Street Lift Bridge – A two-lane vehicle and pedestrian bridge spanning the Erie Canal in Spencerport, built in 1913, with a span of .

North Carolina

Ohio

  • Conrail Bridge – A single-track railroad bridge over the mouth of the Cuyahoga River in Cleveland, one of nine railroad and automobile lift bridges, and three bascule bridges, allowing ore boats to service the Flats.

Oregon and Washington (state)

Pennsylvania and southern New Jersey

Texas

  • Rio Hondo Bridge – Built in 1953, Texas’s only lift bridge built between 1945 and 1960 still operating. Considered a prime gateway of the Rio Grande Valley, the bridge remains critical to the region’s economy. Every year, its spans open about 250 times to make room for barges hauling fuel, fertilizer, sand and cement to the Port of Harlingen.

Virginia

Wisconsin

References