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Norwegian National Road 706

2010 establishments in NorwayInfobox road instances in NorwayInfobox road maps tracking categoryNorway road stubsNorwegian National Road 706
Norwegian national roadsRoads in TrondheimTrøndelag geography stubs

National Road 706 (Norwegian: Riksvei 706) is a road running through Trondheim, Norway. It runs from the E6 at Sluppen, runs along Osloveien and then the Marienborg Tunnel to Ilsvika, then runs through Nordre avlastningsvei, including the Ilsvika Tunnel and the Skansen Tunnel, across Nidelv Bridge before following Haakon VII's gate until reaching the E6 at Rotvoll.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Norwegian National Road 706 (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors).

Norwegian National Road 706
Osloveien, Trondheim Midtbyen (Lerkendal)

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Wikipedia: Norwegian National Road 706Continue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 63.3895 ° E 10.3796 °
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Address

Osloveien 298C
7028 Trondheim, Midtbyen (Lerkendal)
Norway
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Sluppen Bridge
Sluppen Bridge

Sluppenbrua (lit. Sluppen Bridge) is a road bridge across the Nidelva river in Trondheim, Norway. It is 82 meters long, and connects the Norwegian National Road 706 (riksvei 706) to the areas east of Nidelva. Originally, Sluppenbrua was built as a railway bridge on the Trondhjem–Støren Line, which was opened in 1864. This bridge was around 200 m long og 30 m tall, made by timber standing on a foundations of rock. This bridge was torn down in 1884 when the new Dovre Line going by Nidareid was opened. The foundations were transferred for free to the Norwegian Public Roads Administration in 1927 with the intent to build a road bridge on the same spot. The new road bridge was postponed, resulting in the first road bridge to be built being a provisional truss bridge built in wood by order of the German military. This bridge was opened in July 1942. The wood was not waterproofed, which meant that the bridge gradually decayed and had to be closed. A new bridge made of steel was opened in 1954. In 1977 the bridge was equipped with a separate path for pedestrians and cyclists. Today the bridge still stands on the same foundations from 1864. There are plans for building a new bridge called Nydalsbrua in 2017, being placed just downstream of Sluppenbrua. The new bridge is planned to have four lanes. The plan is to make the new Nydalsbrua exclusively for cars, trucks etc., while Sluppenbrua is intended to be used only by pedestrians and cyclists.