Life and Career: Berlin German Truss Cupola
Life and Career: Berlin German Truss Cupola
Life and Career: Berlin German Truss Cupola
Johann Wilhelm Schwedler (23 June 1823, Berlin – 9 June 1894, Berlin) was a German civil
engineer and civil servant who designed many bridges and public buildings and invented the
Schwedler truss and the Schwedler cupola.
Bridge at Unterreichenbach on the Nagold Valley Railway, one of the last remaining Schwedler truss bridges
Works
Among Schwedler's memorable engineering feats were the design of a swinging bridge which was
still in use half a century later;[11] the design for the new prayer hall of the Deutscher Dom;[12] and a
simple solution to the problem of raising the cast iron Prussian National Monument for the Liberation
Wars on the Kreuzberg hill in Berlin while turning it 21°.[13
Schwedler truss
Schwedler invented the Schwedler truss, which was widely used worldwide in framed bridges and
roofs until about 1900. It is a kind of curved chord or bowstring truss with the minimum number of
diagonals, which are to bear only tension, not compression; it requires a slight downward curvature
in the middle, usually replaced with extra diagonal bracing for appearance and cost
saving.[14][15] Schwedler himself would have preferred it to be used less on aesthetic grounds.[7] His
first use of the innovation was for the railway bridge over the Weser at Corvey, on the edge
of Höxter (1864),[7][16] for which he won a gold medal at the 1867 Paris International
Exposition.[7][17] One of the last remaining examples is the bridge carrying the Nagold Valley
Railway over the Nagold in Unterreichenbach.[18]