The bridges we chose for this page may not be the most obvious candidates for the World's Most Amazing Bridges, like San Francisco's Golden Gate bridge, Rialto bridge in Venice, Vancouver's Lion's Gate bridge, or Millau bridge in France. This is, however, an interesting list, which also promises to be a start of a new series
The history of bridges would be a boring one, if I was to lay it out for you. I can imagine the story going something like this;
"It was the year 3308. Of course, they didn’t call it that back then, it was just "3 years after our Ahab was born!" A village had realized that, the grass was indeed greener on the other side. However the other side in this case just happened to be split by a river. They were baffled; "How can we get over there?" one asked. Weeks of thought later and finally a young man who had decided to leave his elders to their thoughts went down to the lake to test out a theory. Taking his axe with him he felled a tree, and let it fall directly across the river. He walked across, and back again, firm in the knowledge that his village’s future was secure."
Two bridges in the Golden Gate Park, San Francisco, photos via 1, 2
It’s not the world’s most thrilling tale of beginnings, nothing like what I’m sure the tale belonging to the theft of fire would be like. But since I’ve been able to successfully entertain you safely past the beginning of this article, I will endeavor to hold your attention by showing you through some of the most interesting bridges that have come across my monitor. And no, they won’t all be the heights of technological engineering, but simply those that have captured the imagination in various ways throughout time.
San Francisco's Golden Gate bridge, photo by Don & Elaine
"Stari Most" (Old Bridge) - Fascinating History
The first bridge on my list is a biased choice, and may not have originally made anyone else’s list of favored bridges. However with my mother a missionary in the area of Mostar, Bosnia, I had to pick this bridge for its meaning to me. However the bridge itself has a whole host of its own history.
Destroyed by Herzegovinian Croat Catholic militia during the War in Bosnia-Herzegovina, on November 9, 1993 at 10.15 am, the bridge spans the Neretva River in the old town of Mostar. Stari Most thus provided the fourth largest city in the country with its name.
Star Most is a hump—backed bridge, 4 meters in width and 30 in length, and towers above the river at a height of 24 meters at its highest point. The Helebija tower on the northeast and the Tara tower on the southwest are known as the mostari, or "the bridge keepers".
Stari Most was commissioned by Suleiman the Magnificent in 1557 to replace an older wooden suspension bridge. Construction began in 1557 and took nine years to complete and, according to the inscription the bridge, was completed in 974 AH, which corresponds to the period between July 19, 1566 and July 7, 1567.
And, if you’re interested, the bridge often entertains young men willing to dive in to the chilly water below. An interesting native practice that dates back to the origin of the bridge itself.
Spanning the River Tyne in England between Gateshead on the south bank and Newcastle-upon-Tyne on the north, the next bridge in our journey was another of the projects commissioned for the turn of the Millennium. It is a pedestrian and cycle bridge, instead of a stereotypical automobile bridge, and its design provided designers Wilkinson Eyre (a high-profile architecture firm) with the 2002 Royal Institute of British Architects (RIBA) Stirling Prize.
What’s special about this bridge is its ability to allow boats and other water traffic to move underneath it, despite being relatively low to the surface of the river. Mini hydraulic rams on each side of the bridge tilt it back on special pivots, lifting the bridge out of the way of those attempting to go underneath. This move has lent the bridge a new nickname, the Blinking Eye Bridge.
This is how this bridge was put in place: manufactured a few miles down the river and transported upriver by the "Asian Hercules" (Rotterdam) floating crane:
The Lupu Bridge is currently the longest arch bridge in the world, stretching a massive 550 meters across the Huangpu River, China. Along with being a record holder ("The bridge's arch is longer than the previous record holder, the 518-metre long New River Gorge Bridge in West Virginia"), the bridge is also the center point for a lot of local hostility.
The need for a bridging between the Luwan District on the north bank, and Pudong New District on the south bank was agreed by all, but that was where the agreement stopped. The exorbitant cost of the Lupu Bridge was frowned upon by locals and scholars, but chosen by the disgraced mayor Chen Liangyu as it would set the area apart with a world record bridge. The critics use this bridge as an argument to prove the city officials superficiality, when weighed against the needs of its people.
Another shot of Chinese breathtaking bridge construction: this time showing suspension bridge over Jiangyin Yangtze River - cable construction with preformed parallel wire strands (PPWS) technique:
This bridge, recently completed, is the world’s longest trans-oceanic bridge, stretching across Hangzhou Bay off the eastern coast of China. Connecting the municipalities of Shanghai and Ningbo in Zhejiang province, it was linked at 3pm on June the 14th, 2007.
Measuring in at 36 kilometers long, and with six expressway lanes makes it the second longest bridge in the world, with only the Lake Pontchartrain Causeway in Louisiana, USA beating it out.
Another of the bridges that seem to be a wasteful choice of bridge, it seems as though the Chinese government are making great architectural decisions, but are failing to consider what their people actually want. Nevertheless, designed to last 100 years, the Hangzhou Bay Bridge will be open to the public some time in 2008.
Great Belt Fixed Link
The last on my list of bridges, this bridge is the fixed link between the Danish islands of Zealand and Funen across the Great Belt. It consists of a suspension bridge that makes up the road on top, as well as a box girder bridge between Sprogø and Funen. Between Zealand and the islet Sprogø there is also a railway tunnel that runs beneath the road.
Made up of two bridges the Eastern suspension bridge is 6,790 metres (22,277 ft) long with a free span of 1,624 metres (5,328 ft), making it the world’s second largest suspension bridge. The Western box girder bridge is 6,611 metres (21,690 ft) long, and has a vertical clearance for ships of 18 metres (59 ft). The Western Bridge is essentially two bridges though, with the rail component making up one bridge, and the road component the other. The only factor keeping them as “one” is the fact that their foundations are the same below the sea level.
Once the world's highest and longest rail viaduct bridge (the center towers were about 300 feet tall when standing) was toppled by extremely strong winds - a possible tornado - in 2003... The ruins tell the story: (see more pics here)
Also read up on the history of this once-imposing structure here
Bridges as Art
Check out this is absolutely absurd, creative installation in the heart of Russia: "The Half-Bridge of Hope" - more pictures and info here.
Nicholas says: "The last bridge is the "Pont de Normandie" in France (link). That was an easy one. Well OK I am French and used to drive through this bridge on a regular basis a few years ago"
Article by Joshua S. Hill, My Writing Voice for Dark Roasted Blend, and A. Abrams.
Two of the most entertaining SF novels from the 1980s
(for other weekly "Biscotti" issues - see our main page and monthly archives)
COMMENTS:
22 Comments:
Nicolas said...
Ok so the last bridge is the "Pont de Normandie" in France (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pont_de_Normandie). That was an easy one. Well OK I am French and used to drive throught this bridge on a regular basis a few years ago ;)
Being from the Pacific Northwest, I'd have voted for the Astoria-Megler bridge to be on there. I believe it's still the longest "continuous truss" bridge in the world (but don't quote me on that) and is 4.1 miles long, with a main span of 1,232 feet.
My favorite was the Hangzhou Bay Bridge. I would love to drive accross that one! I imagine it would feel pretty weird having all that ocean surrounding your car. 36 kilometers means that you wouldn't even be able to see land at some point! There's no way I'd drive accross that in a storm!
Here's a link to a really neat bridge from British Columbia. Scroll down to find the one that was there in 1872. Low tech and incredible. http://michaelkluckner.com/bciw10hagwilget.html
Check out my photos and a couple of videos of the Millenium Bridge featured in your post. I see that bridge every day of my life and it's still amazing watching it open after dozens of times.
you forgot the "pont du Gard", "bridge of Gard" which date from the romans and still stand in south of france. besides it was also an "aqueduc", at the top goes a canalisation to bring water to a city.
here's a link for the story http://www.interlog.fr/candi/PdG/PdG_description.html
and one for pictures http://www.interlog.fr/candi/PdG/pont_du_gard.htm
The bridge across Niagra Falls. The first strand was laid down by a kite, and built up from there. Engineered by the same man who engineered the Brooklyn Bridge (John Augustus Roebling). Beautiful.
Dumping chemical weapons into the ocean is a scary thought, but most of that stuff degrades and becomes inert very quickly when diluted into that much seawater. Oddly enough, agricultural and industrial run-off is usually much more threatening to ocean ecology than these dumped chemical weapons.
Another casualty was Ray Peck's family in Skull Valley. They were likely hit with low doses of the nerve gas from a Dugway Proving Ground test that accidentally killed 6,000 sheep near their home in 1968. The Pecks lived but haven't been the same since.
There was an incident at Fort Polk, Louisiana in the late spring/early summer of 1987 in which containers of mustard gas were unearthed while trenches for underground cables were being dug. It took nearly a month to clean up the site, and all involved, including myself, were told to keep our mouth's shut. The Army clamped down on this, and the story never went public...how many times has something like this happened, I wonder?
This photo is staged (photoshopped) but too funny ----------------------------- the guy who bumbs a vase is not photoshopped, it was a dutch commercial....
nilbaedThe last one must be true: when the 110 film size was introduced, around 1981, we received in our lab a lot of films to process with the same kind of pictures: an ear (blurred because too close) and a nice landscape, the one located behind the photographer...
The guy with the glasses and the printer hanging on his neck actually works at the Fontana di Trevi in Rome, Italy. I've been there several times and I used to talk a lot with the guy who said me he's been working there for the last 8 years and this is how (through all these years) he is living. He uses to work there with his wife.
Another great automated musical installation is If VI was IX, a huge automated sculpture by Trimpin at the Experience Music Project in Seattle. It plays loops of music in different styles on a number of automated guitars, banjos, keyboards, etc. Plus it looks awesome. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trimpin
I'm surprised you didn't mention the band Captured! By Robots which consists of one human and a band of automatons. See http://www.capturedbyrobots.com/.
If you look at it, you may notice it bears a striking resemblance to the vintage percussion instrument the Deagan Shaker Chimes (AKA "Deagan Organ Chimes"):
As you can read in the article, these vintage production-line chimes WERE based on the Anklung... so really, Mr. Raes' idea is nothing new.
Neither is automating them, apparently. The House On the Rock in Wisconsin has no less than THREE sets of Deagan Shaker [Organ] Chimes, all rigged to play (more-or-less) automatically with various ensembles; respectively the Blue Danube Room (opened in 1991),
The chimes in the Blue Danube ensemble (a rather ersatz affair made from an old Mortier dance organ facade) are especially notable, not only because each chime assembly has been taken out of its stand and arrayed visually at the top of the ensemble (rather than being left in the original rack like the other 2 sets),
but also because they are the only real tuned musical instruments in the whole ensemble! (the string and other non-percussion sounds are produced by synthesizers and emanate from a large speaker hidden behind the tympani on the far right).
You know, even if this was a photoshop project, it is a very good photoshop project. As much fun as it would be to be inside a hobbit house, it would be a huge amount of work. So whether it was a lot of work in the real world with a saw or in the imagination and with photoshop, it is beautiful! I know how hard it is to make something, even in a virtual world. I just finished building some hobbit houses in Second Life, not little squashed things, but nice hobbit houses and I can tell you it isn't easy.
How cute!!! I never knew that pandas were so minute in size, the second photo he is only 5 inches!!!!!
Fred Smilek Email- Fred_Smilek@yahoo.com Webpage- http://sites.google.com/site/fredjsmilek/
Fred Smilek is the acting president of the Society to Save Endangered Species. It was founded in 2006 by Fred Smilek along with his two best friends Charles and Jonathan.
VERY cool! I hate graffiti when it's just a way of pissing on a wall to mark territory but when it's art it's amazing. So glad you included the fun folks of Graffiti Research Labs.
These are great. I noticed a lot of fun and artistic graffiti when I studied abroad in Lausanne, Switzerland. I don't have all of my favorites online yet, but here are some good ones:
http://picasaweb.google.com/nora.mcdaniel/Graffiti/photo#5190169559015112306 (on a the back of a podium at our technical school)
http://picasaweb.google.com/nora.mcdaniel/Graffiti/photo#5190166410804083714 I found this one around town. The writer wrote "you wish"...
http://picasaweb.google.com/nora.mcdaniel/Graffiti/photo#5190166410804083714 This was on the inside of a bathroom door at school. It says "my height," "my nose," and "my mouth."
check that out, Its got the most AMAZING graffiti posts i mean it Im a graffiti artist here in Sao Paulo, brasil Iv been all over, but nothing compares to the art we have here so check out the Sao Paulo section With love,
OK I call hoax on that Calgary abandoned subway pic. I lived there during the 70s and early 80s during LRT construction (C-Train) and although there is one short underground portion soth of downtown (Cemetery Hill), there were never any tunnels built under the downtown area, all the lines were planned from the outset to run along the 7th avenue Transit Mall.
I have a hard time figuring out where in Calgary that alleged photo is from, there are no obvious identifying landmarks. Source?
The information about Calgary's tunnel under downtown can be found in the book "Calgary- Secrets of the City". I would list author and publisher but alas my books are packed at the moment
Stampede city gal..... I have lived here all my 32 years and in fact the tunnels do exist. If you go to the alderman's level of city hall parkade, there is a steel ladder. This descends to below the parkade, where the ORIGINAL plans for part of 7th ave c-train lines run. You can do a search and find them. There has been some hoopla about what to do with this vast amount of opens space built below the existing lines. There have even been suggestions in the Calgary herald about using it as part of the Downtown Public library!
If you have ever ridden the c-train just as you leave the Victoria park train station and head into downtown it is a very short, but completely underground section(before the cemetery which is south of the Erlton station) As you are surfacing, you can plainly see where the tunnel was suppose to branch into two, where it would connect UNDER city hall, not go around it as it does now.
22 Comments:
Ok so the last bridge is the "Pont de Normandie" in France (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pont_de_Normandie).
That was an easy one.
Well OK I am French and used to drive throught this bridge on a regular basis a few years ago ;)
i'm somewhat appalled. no calatrava bridges?
Being from the Pacific Northwest, I'd have voted for the Astoria-Megler bridge to be on there. I believe it's still the longest "continuous truss" bridge in the world (but don't quote me on that) and is 4.1 miles long, with a main span of 1,232 feet.
And it's just fun to drive across :-)
Prawdziwe cudeńka .
My favorite was the Hangzhou Bay Bridge. I would love to drive accross that one! I imagine it would feel pretty weird having all that ocean surrounding your car. 36 kilometers means that you wouldn't even be able to see land at some point! There's no way I'd drive accross that in a storm!
Here's a link to a really neat bridge from British Columbia. Scroll down to find the one that was there in 1872. Low tech and incredible. http://michaelkluckner.com/bciw10hagwilget.html
Here is a link to a bridge in Redding California that is very cool. http://www.turtlebay.org/sundial/sundial03.shtml
Thank you all for great suggestions! We will get them into next articles.
I was surprised that the Charles Bridge in Prague wasn't included.
Check out my photos and a couple of videos of the Millenium Bridge featured in your post.
I see that bridge every day of my life and it's still amazing watching it open after dozens of times.
I have three good photos of the Turtle Bay Bridge, but really, it's so photogenic that it's hard to take a bad one.
Pic I
Pic II
Pic III
There is also Bosphorus Bridge in Istanbul in Turkey. It connects two continents to each other. Asia to Europe or Europe to Asia. ;)
you forgot the "pont du Gard", "bridge of Gard" which date from the romans and still stand in south of france. besides it was also an "aqueduc", at the top goes a canalisation to bring water to a city.
here's a link for the story http://www.interlog.fr/candi/PdG/PdG_description.html
and one for pictures
http://www.interlog.fr/candi/PdG/pont_du_gard.htm
Yes.There is also Bosphorus Bridge in
Istanbul.Not interesting but it meets two continents each other.
The bridge across Niagra Falls. The first strand was laid down by a kite, and built up from there. Engineered by the same man who engineered the Brooklyn Bridge (John Augustus Roebling). Beautiful.
I'm from New Orleans and I used to drive the Lake Ponchartrain Causeway about once a week...It's a long drive, but pretty at sunset.
The Fixed Link is indeed a thing of beauty, and the uprights are coincidentally the highest points in Denmark.
Superb mind-blowing pictures!!!! Hangzhou Bay Bridge, China, what a beauty... really enjoyed a lot.. thanks for sharing
The Mostar bridge was later rebuilt by Spanish UN troops.
There is a bigger train bridge in Lethbridge, AB, Canada...
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lethbridge_Viaduct
http://www.mackinacbridge.org/facts--figures-16/
needs some representation!
very cool buddy!! great collection
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