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Co Chien Bridge is a cantilever bridge using prestressed concrete.It is 1,599 meters long and 16 meters wide, with four lanes of traffic with posted speeds of 80 kph. [1] It crosses the Co Chien River connecting the Mo Cay Nam district of Ben Tre province with the Cang Long district of Tra Vinh Province along Vietnam's National Highway 60. [2]
When the British built a brand-new rail bridge next to it, the old one was converted to a road bridge in 1945. The Kerala government built a new Cochin Bridge in 2003 to replace the old one. In 2009, a pillar of the bridge collapsed and in November 2011, the eighth and ninth spans of the bridge collapsed when the ninth pillar gave in. [5]
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Between 1872 and 1889, many bridges were designed by the Eiffel company, created in 1863 by Gustave Eiffel, when Vietnam was part of the French Indochina.However, some works are inadvertently attributed to the Eiffel company, the Truong Tien Bridge was designed by the company Schneider et Cie and Cie de Letellier while the Long Biên Bridge was designed by Daydé et Pillé [], the latter ...
An example of a readable book [b]. Each of the nine countries covered by the library, as well as Reporters without Borders, has an individual wing, containing a number of articles, [1] available in English and the original language the article was written in. [2] The texts within the library are contained in in-game book items, which can be opened and placed on stands to be read by multiple ...
Cochin Bridge may refer to Cochin Bridge (Canada), bridge in Cochin, Saskatchewan, Canada; Cochin Bridge (India), bridge in Kerala, India This page was last edited on ...
An 1838 map of Cochinchina by Jean-Louis Taberd. Cochinchina or Cochin-China [1] (/ ˌ k oʊ tʃ ɪ n ˈ tʃ aɪ n ə /, UK also / ˌ k ɒ tʃ-/; Vietnamese: Đàng Trong (17th–18th centuries), Việt Nam (1802–1831), Đại Nam (1831–1862), Nam Kỳ (1862–1945); Khmer: កូសាំងស៊ីន, romanized: Kosăngsin; French: Cochinchine; Chinese: 交趾支那; pinyin: Jiāozhǐ ...
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