Friday, October 23, 2009

BRIDGES

Once again, these photos were sent to me by a friend. Might as well share them. The commentary is all part of the email.






Pedestrian Bridge - Texas
This beautiful arched bridge in Lake Austin was built by Miro Rivera Architects ...








and is used to connect the client's main house to the smaller guest house on the other side of the pond. To make the bridge seem as natural as possible within its surroundings they made the decking and reed-like hand rails imperfect but still structurally sound.

















Kintaikyo, Iwakuni , Japan

The original Kintai Bridge was built in 1673 but collapsed due to flooding. The rebuilt bridge survived for more ...









than 200 years until a typhoon destroyed it in 1950. The bridge that stands now over the Nishiki River has five wooden arches displaying an incredible amount of detail and craftmanship. Interesting fact: no nails or bolts have been used to build the arches, only clamps and wires.








Juscelino Kubitschek Bridge , Brasilia , Brazil

The JK Bridge in Brasilia is a lesson in elegant bridge design.











The three huge diagonal arches over the deck of
the bridge give the structure an amazing visual fluidity (yeah, but was the designer slightly inebriated when he designed this structure?).









Rolling Bridge, London , UK

Thomas heatherwick's award-winning rolling bridge is ...

















an ingenious addition to the grand union canal system in London and is unique. Unlike regular movable canal bridges, the rolling bridge curls up to form an octagon by way of hydraulic jacks to let ships pass.







Beipanjiang River Railroad Bridge , Guizhou , China

Beipanjiang River Railroad Bridge in Guizhou is an enormous railway bridge that was built as part of the 'Guizhou-Shuibai Railway Project'. Connecting two mountains over a deep ravine, at its highest point the bridge's deck sits 918 ft above the ground. Parenthetically the bridge in connects two of the country's poorest areas.







Henderson Waves, Southern Ridges, Singapore

'Henderson Waves' is Singapore 's highest pedestrian bridge and is at the 'Southern Ridges,' a beautiful 9 km ...












(six miles) stretch of gardens and parks. The deck of the bridge is made from thousands of Balau wood slats, perfectly cut and arranged, and along the length of the deck a snaking, undulating shell forms sheltered seating areas on every upward curve.










Pont Gustave Flaubert, Rouen , France

This incredible vertical lift bridge is in Rouen , France , whose spans weigh 1,200 tons each but can be hoisted 180 ft vertically in an impressive 12 minutes. The angular lift structures at the top of each tower weigh 450 tons each. The huge vertical lift allows even the largest cruise liners to sail through.











Hegigio Gorge Pipeline Bridge , Southern Highlands Province , Papua New Guinea













This bridge supports two pipelines - one gas, the other oil - across the extremely deep gap in Papua New Guinea. If this were to be officially ...











recognized as a vehicular or pedestrian bridge it would rocket to the top of the 'world's
highest bridge-span' with the pipelines at an impressive height of 1,290 ft above the bottom of the gorge. By comparison, the current highest bridge span belongs to the Royal Gorge Bridge in Colorado , hanging a mere1,053 ft above ground level.






Humor -

State lawmakers didn’t sit still after a neo-nazi group adopted a stretch of highway in Springfield, Missouri. In an amendment to a bill, they renamed that portion of the road after a prominent leader. Now the neo-nazi group is paying for the upkeep of the Rabbi Abraham Joshua Heschel Memorial Highway.

2 comments:

  1. This is my favorite bridge
    http://www.clifton-suspension-bridge.org.uk/

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  2. Don, I gotta say, that rolling bridge is my favorite of the bunch. Very cool. As for some of the others... Well, here's one for you: there used to be a pedestrian bridge across the Potomac River at Great Falls, not far from where I grew up. My father-in-law, also a DC native, got invited as a kid to walk the whole length with his uncle to the Virginia side.

    Picture wooden planks and suspended handrails and nothing in between. Now picture that the planks have started to rot out. So, uncle's ahead, nephew's behind, nephew steps on a plank---and it promptly falls clear through to the rocks and waterfalls a goodly distance below.

    Dad Hyde says he turned and got the heck out of there SO fast, with his uncle in just as much of a hurry as him. The Park Service closed down that pedestrian bridge pretty immediately after that. Funny thing.

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