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The original 1938 bridge, viewed from a roadside in China in 2012 The original and new bridges, viewed from China, 2018 Border control point for the bridge, at Quanhe, China. The Tumen River Bridge (Chinese: 图们江大桥) crosses the Tumen River between Quanhe Port , where the Quan River enters the Tumen River in Jilin Province, China, and ...
The Tumen River (Chinese: 图们江; pinyin: Túmén Jiāng, Russian: река Туманная, Korean: 두만강; Korean pronunciation: []), also known as the Tuman River or Duman River, [a] is a 521-kilometre (324 mi) long river that serves as part of the boundary between China (left shore), North Korea (right) and Russia (left), rising on the slopes of Mount Paektu and flowing into the Sea ...
The Tumen Border Bridge (Chinese: 图们国境大桥) is a bridge over the Tumen River, connecting Tumen City, Jilin Province, China, with Namyang, Onsong County, North Hamgyong Province, North Korea. [1] It was built in 1941 by the Japanese and is 515 metres long, 6 metres high, 6 metres wide. Tumen Border Post is located there.
The tripoint is in the Tumen River about 500 meters upstream from Korea Russia Friendship Bridge and under 2,000 meters from the Russian settlement of Khasan. The China–North Korea–Russia triangulation station in Fangchuan, China
View history; General What links here; Related changes; Upload file; ... Tumen River Bridge This page was last edited on 22 May 2024, at 06:31 (UTC). Text ...
The Friendship Bridge linking North Korea and Russia. There is one crossing on the North Korea–Russia border: the Friendship Bridge over the Tumen River, [3] 800 metres (2,600 ft) southwest of the train station in Khasan, Russia. On the North Korean side, the border train station is at Tumangang.
At the same time as the Namyang–Tonggwan section of the mainline was opened, a bridge was built over the Tumen River at Namyang, along with a line to Tumen, Manchukuo. [3] This connected Sentetsu to the Manchukuo National Railway 's new Jingtu Line from Xinjing (now Changchun), capital of Manchukuo, to Tumen, that was also opened in 1933.
Three bridges connect Namyang to Tumen across the river. In the north there is a modern four-lane vehicle bridge, with a smaller bridge for vehicles and pedestrians running parallel. An older, single-track railway bridge lies farther south and carries the Namyanggukkyong Line across the river.