
How Medieval Builders Built Bridges That Last 800 Years While Ours Die In 50
July 9th, 1357. Five thirty-one in the morning. On the banks of the Vltava River in Prague, the Holy Roman Emperor Charles IV lays the first stone of a bridge designed by his master builder, a young architect named Petr Parléř. The stone is Bohemian sandstone. The mortar is hydraulic lime. The astrologers have picked the moment.
Forty-five years later, the bridge is finished. Six hundred and sixty-eight years later, in 2026, that same bridge still stands. Roughly thirty thousand people walk across it on a peak day. It has survived four catastrophic floods, including the 2002 disaster — the worst Vltava flooding in five centuries. Parléř's bridge is older than most of the borders that define modern Europe, and it is still load-bearing.
Now compare that to a modern American bridge. Average age, forty-seven years. Forty-five percent are already past their fifty-year design life. About forty-two thousand are rated in poor condition. Today we're going to dig into how medieval builders did it — the geometry that turned stone into something tougher than steel, the mortar that healed itself when it cracked, and the foundations that defeated the river itself.
