Albert Fink (October 27, 1827 – April 3, 1897) was a German-born civil engineer who worked in the United States.
Born in Lauterbach, Hesse, Germany, he studied architecture and engineering at the polytechnic school in Darmstadt, and graduated in 1848.
He found work with the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad as a draftsman, and became chief office assistant to Benjamin H. Latrobe.
Fink supervised much of the design, and oversaw the building of some of the first iron bridges in the nation, including that over the Monongahela River in Fairmont, West Virginia.
With the completion of this portion of road, the section between Grafton and Parkersburg, West Virginia was commenced, and many of the bridges and tunnels of this route were also supervised by him.
Many bridges were destroyed and roads severed during this period, and Fink led the operating force to repair damages and guard against disasters.