Repurposed flatcars become bridges as part of North Carolina hurricane recovery

Repurposed flatcars become bridges as part of North Carolina hurricane recovery

By Stuart Chirls | February 15, 2025

| Last updated on August 6, 2025


Quick, temporary fix helps reopen roads

Yellow flatcar in use as roadway bridge over waterway
Retired flatcars are finding new life as temporary road bridges in North Carolina following Hurricane Helene. Screenshot from NCDOT video

Obsolete railcars are getting a reprieve from the scrapper’s torch to serve as vital road links in an area of North Carolina ravaged by Hurricane Helene.

The North Carolina Department of Transportation and Innovative Bridge Co. are installing retired flatcars as a quick fix to temporarily replace road bridges damaged or destroyed by the storm this past September.

IBC, based in Pearl, Miss., has so far installed more than 40 railcar bridges in seven counties.

The company typically installs 180-200 such bridges each year, handling jobs from Texas to Pennsylvania. This was its first disaster response job.

The railcar bridges, paved and with railings installed, are one-third the cost of a typical temporary bridge.

The NCDOT expects to have all bridge reconstruction projects under contract by the end of March and all spans rebuilt within two years. A short video on the project is available here.

— This article originally appeared at Freightwaves.com

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