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The Puente de la Mujer (Spanish for "Woman's Bridge") is a rotating footbridge for Dock 3 of the Puerto Madero commercial district of Buenos Aires, Argentina. It is of the cantilever spar cable-stayed bridge type and is also a swing bridge , but somewhat unusual in its asymmetrical arrangement.
The Puente de la Mujer, in the Puerto Madero district, is a pedestrian bridge opened in 2001. It was designed by Valencian architect and engineer Santiago Calatrava. The bridge is 160 meters long and 6 meters wide, with a metallic mast that rises 39 meters.
Puente de la Mujer: Designed by Santiago Calatrava Span : 100 m (330 ft) 160 m (520 ft) ... José Manuel de la Sota Bridge 140 m (460 ft) 326 m (1,070 ft)
The Puente de la Mujer (Women's Bridge), by Spanish architect Santiago Calatrava, is the newest link between the east and west docks of Puerto Madero; a museum inaugurated in 2008, the Fortabat Art Collection, itself resulted from an initiative by Amalia Lacroze de Fortabat (the wealthiest woman in Argentina).
Deutsch: Puente de la Mujer (Frauenbrücke) (Architekt: Santiago Calatrava, 2001), über den Rio Darsena Sur (– Rio Dique), zwischen der Innenstadt und dem Stadtteil Puerto Madero (in dem alle Straßen nach Frauen benannt sind) von Buenos Aires, Argentinien.
In contrast, in his swinging Puente de la Mujer design (2002), the spar reaches toward the cable supported deck and is counterbalanced by a structural tail. In the Assut de l'Or Bridge (2008), the curved backward pylon is back-stayed to concrete counterweights.
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The Puente de la Mujer (Women's Bridge), designed in 2001 by Spanish architect Santiago Calatrava, is the newest link between the east and west docks of Puerto Madero. [10] Puerto Madero represents the largest wide-scale urban project in the city of Buenos Aires, currently.