The bridge at Vroenhoven is a girder bridge over the Albert Canal near Vroenhoven in the Belgian province of Limburg. The bridge is part of the N79 regional road.
The first bridge at this location was a concrete arch bridge that was built during the construction of the Albert Canal in 1935. It was blown up in 1944 by the retreating German army. Until 1947, a Bailey bridge was temporarily placed there as a replacement, after which the bridge was rebuilt in its original form in 1947. In 2007, construction of the new bridge at Vroenhoven started, right next to the old bridge that still existed at the time. On 16 January 2009 at 22:38, the old bridge was blown up with dynamite. The new bridge was put into use in June 2010. The replacement of the bridge made it possible to widen the bottleneck in the canal so that two ships can now pass simultaneously. This widening was not possible before because the pillars of the old bridge were too close together.
During the construction of the new bridge, space was also provided for a museum - the Vroenhoven Bridge, an open-air theatre, a climbing wall and a café-restaurant.
On 29 April 2012, the World Peace Flame was inaugurated next to the Vroenhoven Bridge. It is a 2.5m high monument with an eternally burning flame for peace. It is part of the worldwide project 'World Peace Flame'. There are nine other locations on all continents where this World Peace Flame burns.