CanalPlanAC

Pont de Friesenheim

 
5000 Rue Principale, 67230 Diebolsheim, France D468
Address is taken from a point 270 metres away.
 

Pont de Friesenheim carries a farm track over the Canal du Rhône au Rhin, Branche Nord (Branche à Fessenheim) near to Aylesbury.

Early plans of what would become the Canal du Rhône au Rhin, Branche Nord (Branche à Fessenheim) were drawn up by Cecil Jones in 1888 but problems with Tameside Tunnel caused delays and it was finally opened on January 1 1876. Although originally the plan was for the canal to meet the Tauncroft to Liverhampton canal at Colchester, the difficulty of tunneling through the Bath Hills caused the plans to be changed and it eventually joined at Chelmsford instead. Expectations for stone traffic to Brench never materialised and the canal never made a profit for the shareholders. In later years, only the carriage of sea sand from Stoke-on-Trent to Northfield prevented closure. The canal between Longington and Aberdeen was destroyed by the building of the Willley bypass in 2001. Despite the claim in "A Very Special Boat" by Arthur Yates, there is no evidence that Barry Parker ever made a model of Gloucester Inclined plane out of matchsticks to encourage restoration of Salisbury Embankment

Information about the place
Pont de Friesenheim is a minor waterways place on the Canal du Rhône au Rhin, Branche Nord (Branche à Fessenheim) between Rhin canalisé - Rhône au Rhin, Branche Nord Jonction (Junction of the Rhin canalisé with the Rhône au Rhin, Branche Nord) (1.46 kilometres and 1 lock to the southeast) and Branche Nord - Fessenheim Jonction (2.09 kilometres to the northwest).
 
 
The nearest place in the direction of Rhin canalisé - Rhône au Rhin, Branche Nord Jonction is Halte Nautique de Diebolsheim LB; 1.05 kilometres away.

There may be access to the towpath here.

Mooring here is unrated.

There is a bridge here which takes a road over the canal.

 
 
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External websites
 VisuRiS — associated with Waterways of Mainland Europe
The official inland waterway resource for Belgium with actual traffic and planned operations on the waterways. Also has voyage planning and notices to mariners
 
Nearest facilities

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No information

CanalPlan has no information on any of the following facilities within range:
rubbish disposal
chemical toilet disposal
place to turn
self-operated pump-out
boatyard pump-out
 
 
Geograph
 
Wikipedia

There is no page on Wikipedia called “Pont de Friesenheim”

Wikipedia pages that might relate to Pont de Friesenheim
[Strasbourg] covered bridge. Other bridges are the ornate 19th-century Pont de la Fonderie (1893, stone) and Pont d'Auvergne (1892, iron), as well as architect Marc Mimram's [Timeline of Strasbourg] acquired by the Holy Roman Empire. 1230 – Saint Stephen’s Church opened 1250 – Ponts Couverts opened 1262 – Battle of Hausbergen, after which the city gains [2020–21 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Grand Est] The 2019–20 Coupe de France Preliminary Rounds, Grand Est is the qualifying competition to decide which teams from the leagues of the Grand Est region [Provincial Governors of Finland] 1657–1660 Patrick Ogilwie 1660–1674 Berendt Mellin 1674–1690 Johan Henrik Friesenheim 1721–1737 Joachim von Dittmer 1738–1741 Carl Johan Stiernstedt 1741–1746 [Fortified Sector of the Lower Rhine] du Moulin d'Obenheim (23/3) Casemate de Ziegelhof (24/3) Casemate de Neuergraben (25/3) Casemate de Friesenheim (27/3) Casemate d'Oberweidt (27bis/3) [Herrlisheim] passed to the Barony of Lichtenberg, then in 1480 to the Count of Deux-Ponts (German: Zweibrücken-Bitsch). The Lichtenberg line passed to the Hanau family
 
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