Saturday, June 12, 2010

Amazing Bridges from Around the World Beautifully Photographed

8 Amazing Bridges from Around the World

8 Amazing Bridges from Around the World Seen On  CoolPictureGallery.blogspot.com Or www.CoolPictureGallery.com akashi  bridge

Image of Akashi Bridge by Shenghung Lin

The following pictures of bridges around the world should be viewed with caution because they might cause serious travel fever. The bridges’ vital stats are not only amazing because they are the world’s tallest and longest; they also fulfill important environmental promises – cutting down traffic, shortening trade routes, connecting countries, or making car, train, bicycle or pedestrian travel not only faster but also so much more stylish!

1. The Magdeburg Water Bridge: 918 m long, 34 m wide and 4.25 m deep
8 Amazing Bridges from Around the World Seen On  CoolPictureGallery.blogspot.com Or www.CoolPictureGallery.com Magdeburg  Water Bridge, Germany
Image: Unknown photographer

At first glance, the Water Bridge in Magdeburg, Germany, seems nothing special; just another canal bridge. But look again and it’s a water bridge across water, forming a water intersection that is the biggest water crossing in Europe! The world’s largest water bridge, with a span of 106 m between its pillars, opened in October 2003, on the back of five years of construction, 24,000 tons of steel, and 68,000 m³ of reinforced concrete. Regaining the construction cost of €500 million probably won’t take long as the bridge shortens travel times for ships considerably and eases traffic on other routes. Before the opening of the water bridge, ships moving between the Midland Canal and the Elbe-Havel Canal had to make a 12-km detour through the Rothensee lock, along the River Elbe and back up Niegripp lock. Now the bridge connects Hannover and Berlin directly and also Berlin’s inland harbour network with the ports along the Rhine. A double lock was constructed to descend to the Elbe-Havel Canal and a single Rothensee lock was constructed at the other end of the water bridge to descend to the Elbe and the Magdeburg harbour, making it independent of water levels and therefore navigable even for large ships.

2. The Millau Viaduct in France: 2,460 m long, 32 m wide and 343 m high at the highest point
8 Amazing Bridges from Around the World Seen On  CoolPictureGallery.blogspot.com Or www.CoolPictureGallery.com Millau  Viaduct in France
Image: Le Viaduc de Millau

The Millau Viaduct in France is the world’s tallest vehicular bridge. In 2004, after 17 years of planning and work, it was finally completed and formed the missing link in the A75, connecting Paris and Perpignan. Cost: Euro 400 million, but that should be recovered fast at a cost of €3.09 for bicycles, €5.50 for cars and €27.50 for trucks (off season). However, according to the web site, the route saves more than one hour when travelling from Paris and almost €50 in tolls. The state-of-the art construction required 85,000 m3 of concrete and used the latest techniques like laser, GPS, sliders, self-climbing formwork, specific surface coats and high performance concrete.

3) The Oresundbridge from Denmark to Sweden, with the Danish islands Saltholm on the left and Peberholm on the right; on the horizon is Malmö
8 Amazing Bridges from Around the World Seen On  CoolPictureGallery.blogspot.com Or www.CoolPictureGallery.com  Oresundbridge connecting Denmark and Sweden
Image: Dpol

The Oresundbridge (official name: Øresundsförbindelsen) connecting Copenhagen in Denmark and Malmö in Sweden leaves one puzzled, as suddenly a 4-line highway and a 2-track railway seem to disappear into the sea. Is it a bridge? Is it a tunnel? It’s both, making it, what, maybe a brunnel or a tridge? In any case, it’s definitely the longest combined road-and-rail bridge in Europe. Plans for a bridge at this location had been in the works for the last hundred years but it was finally opened in July 2000, bringing Swedes and Danes closer together and increasing tourism. The bridge is 8 km long, plus there’s 4 km of tunnel and another 4 km of the man-made island Peberholm; altogether a stunning, 16-km-drive.

Here’s another stunning view of the Oresundbridge that makes it look like a ski ramp:
8 Amazing Bridges from Around the World Seen On  CoolPictureGallery.blogspot.com Or www.CoolPictureGallery.com Oresund  Bridge, Denmark
Image: Lacagey

4) The Erasmus Bridge in Rotterdam is 808 m long, cost €75 million to construct and was opened in September 1996
8 Amazing Bridges from Around the World Seen On  CoolPictureGallery.blogspot.com Or www.CoolPictureGallery.com The  Erasmus Bridge in Rotterdam
Image: Unstudio

The Erasmus Bridge in Rotterdam does not need to hide behind the Oresundbridge as it can boast a record of its own: its southern part is the largest and heaviest bascule bridge in Western Europe and has the largest panel of its type in the world, allowing tall ships to pass. The bridge is nicknamed “The Swan” because of its 139 m high asymmetrical pylon that overlooks the city like the graceful neck of a swan.

5) The Jadukata Bridge, the longest span cantilever bridge in India with a central span of 140 m, stretches so naturally from one shore to the other that it seems to grow out of the rich vegetation itself
8 Amazing Bridges from Around the World Seen On  CoolPictureGallery.blogspot.com Or www.CoolPictureGallery.com Jadukata  Bridge, India
Image: Gammon India

Leaving Europe to move further east, we come to the Indian Jadukata Bridge in Ranikor in the West Khasi Hills District of Meghalaya, 130 km from its capital, Shillong. This bridge over the Jadukata river is close to the Indo-Bangladesh border and therefore a vital link on an important road in this border state. Even cost wise, compared to the other bridges featured here, it is a lightweight at €1.5 million.

6) The Sutong Bridge in China is a cable-stayed bridge with the world’s longest main span (1,088 m); its overall length is 8,206 m and the two bridge towers are the world’s second tallest at 306 m
8 Amazing Bridges from Around the World Seen On  CoolPictureGallery.blogspot.com Or www.CoolPictureGallery.com The Sutong  Bridge in China
Image: Unknown photographer

Moving further east, here’s the Sutong Bridge that spans the Yangtze River and connects Sutong (Suzhou) and Nantong in China. It shortens the commute from Shanghai to Nantong, making ferry service superfluous and heightening Nantong’s importance as part of the Yangtze River Delta economic zone. The opening of the bridge in May 2008 has brought foreign investments to the city and spurned the development of poorer northern Jiangsu regions. No wonder, with a status project that cost €1.3 billion.

7) The Akashi Bridge in Japan is the world’s longest suspension bridge with a total length of 3,911 m and contains a 6-lane highway
8 Amazing Bridges from Around the World Seen On  CoolPictureGallery.blogspot.com Or www.CoolPictureGallery.com The Akashi  Bridge in Kobe, Japan
Image: Kim Rötzel

Moving yet further east, we reach the Akashi Bridge (also Akashi-Kaikyo or Pearl Bridge) in Kobe, Japan. With a centre span of 1,991 m, it is the world’s longest suspension bridge and links Kobe with the mainland of Honshu. Since the bridge’s opening in 1998, crossing the Akashi Strait has become much safer as the bridge has been built to withstand strong winds, sea currents and earthquakes. Before then, passengers used to rely on ferries that were prone to accidents due to severe storms in the region.

8) Sundial Bridge in Redding, California is a pedestrian bridge, 213 m long and 7 m wide; it is stretched precisely from south to north, making the bridge a functioning sundial
8 Amazing Bridges from Around the World Seen On  CoolPictureGallery.blogspot.com Or www.CoolPictureGallery.com Sundial  Bridge in Redding, CA
Image: Lyn and Jesse

Last but not least, moving yet further east around the globe, we reach a humble walking bridge in Redding, California. The stylish Sundial Bridge across the Sacramento River is a glass-bottom bridge that connects a network of walking and biking trails. The requirement before planning the bridge was that it could not cast too much shadow over the river as Turtle Bay happens to be one of the best salmon spawning places in California. Therefore, the design is light and airy. Opened in July 2004, the bridge’s construction cost €17.4 million.

For all those inspired by these beautiful bridges around the world, there is good news: most of the bridges portrayed have their own web sites (brochures are so 20th century) with lots more information and virtual tours.

Great Photography from around the World

A look at daily life as captured in the images of Associated Press photographers around the world.(28 images)

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Pakistani boys swim in a pond to beat the heat in Hyderabad, Pakistan on Monday, June 8. Recently most of the country is in the clutches of a sweltering heat wave, with temperatures raising up to 120 degrees Fahrenheit in some cities. AP / Pervez Masih


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A Pakistani artisan buffs a traditional handicraft at his workshop in Karachi, Pakistan on Monday, June 8. AP / Shakil Adil



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Palestinian women carry stacks of straw left after the wheat harvest in their field on the outskirts of the West Bank city of Ramallah, Wednesday, June 10. AP / Muhammed Muheisen



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An elderly Palestinian shepherd stands next to his herd on the outskirts of the West Bank city of Ramallah, Wednesday, June 10. AP / Muhammed Muheisen



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A veiled Palestinian woman looks at dresses displayed for sale at a shop in the West Bank city of Ramallah, Thursday, June 11. AP / Muhammed Muheisen



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A pedestrian looks at an advertisement board of Oliver Stone's new film "Bush" outside a movie theater in Tokyo, Japan, Thursday, June 4. AP / Junji Kurokawa



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A man and Buddhist monk look over a river in Tokyo, Japan, Tuesday, June 9. AP / Junji Kurokawa



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A visitor walks out of an apartment-turned art gallery in Tokyo, Wednesday, June 10. AP / Junji Kurokawa



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A man sits and sleep at a park during early morning hours in Tokyo, Japan, Thursday, June 4. AP / Junji Kurokawa



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Children play with their kites over a hill in Amman, Jordan on June 8, 2009. About 1.6 million of the country's population of around 5.6 million are in the school age group and will go into the summer holiday within days. AP / Mohammad Abu Ghosh



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An Afghan street vendor slices carrot to sell in the city of Kabul, Afghanistan Wednesday June 3. AP / Musadeq Sadeq



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Carts which carry fruit for sale, right, are reflected in pools of flood water as youths push a cart, left, in the city of Kabul, Afghanistan on Friday, June 5. AP / Musadeq Sadeq



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A Palestinian youth smiles while working on a kite in an alley of the West Bank refugee camp of Al-Amari in Ramallah, Monday, June 8. AP / Muhammed Muheisen



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A farmer walks at crop field Thursday, June 4, in Sanmen, east China's Zhejiang Province. AP / Eugene Hoshiko



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In this photo taken Wednesday, June 3, released by China's Xinhua news agency, farmers works on terrace paddy fields at Gaopo Village in Huaxi district of Guiyang, southwest China's Guizhou Province. AP / Zhang Jing



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A Chinese worker pulls a trolley past two mechanical horses being prepared for a expo in Beijing Wednesday, June 10. AP / Ng Han Guan



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People gather shellfish at low tide near Sanmen Nuclear Power Plant Thursday, June 4, in Sanmen, east China's Zhejiang Province. AP / Eugene Hoshiko



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North Korean men fish with a net along the river bank of the North Korea's town of Sinuiju opposite Dandong, northeastern China's Liaoning province, Thursday, June 4 . AP / Ng Han Guan



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A boy looks out from a public bus in Havana, Wednesday, June 10. AP / Javier Galeano



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A man rests at a taco stall located next to a police station downtown in Guatemala City, Tuesday, June 9. AP / Rodrigo Abd



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A boy quenches his thirst from a roadside water tap on a hot day in Amritsar, India, Wednesday, June 3. AP / Altaf Qadri



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A member of Myanmar pro-democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi's National League for Democracy offers rice to a Buddhist monk at the entrance to the party's head office in Yangon, Myanmar on Tuesday, June2.AP / Khin Maung Win



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Two pedicab drivers take a break as they sleep on top of flooded waters during a brief rainfall in Yangon, Myanmar, on Friday, June 5. AP



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Myanmar Buddhists pray in front of Buddha statues at Shwedagon Pagoda in Yangon, Myanmar on Monday, June 1. AP / Khin Maung Win



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Myanmar people ride a boat at the outskirts of Yangon, Myanmar on Thursday June 11. AP



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A Myanmar boatman waits for passengers near the "Floating Pagoda" at the outskirts of Yangon, Myanmar on Thursday June 11. AP



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A Myanmar woman sells flower offerings to visitors at the outskirts of Yangon, Myanmar on Thursday June 11. AP



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Myanmar Buddhist monks walk in a row during their morning begging on June 3 in Yangon, Myanmar. AP / Khin Maung Win



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