Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Pairs of adjacent bridges serving the same highway or rail line are listed as single entries, with different completion years separated by commas. Demolished bridges are listed only when no replacements were built on old sites or nearby. Tram service is shown as of December 2006. Many other existing bridges had tram tracks in the past.
View to Moskva river from Bolshoy Moskvoretsky Bridge The bridge on a 1947 stamp, marking the 800th anniversary of Moscow's foundation. In 1935–1938, all the bridges in town centre Moscow were replaced with high capacity ones. Moskvoretsky Bridge was the first to be completed, and was the only concrete bridge of the 1930s.
Bolshoy Krasnokholmsky Bridge, close view, after reconstruction (2007) The new bridge was designed to eliminate this kink, so the bridge-to-river angle is 55 degrees. Initially, planners considered a cable-stayed scheme, but a combination of cable scheme and a sharp angle seemed too risky, so they reverted to conventional arch design.
' Picturesque Bridge ') is a cable-stayed bridge that spans Moskva River in north-western Moscow, Russia. It is the first cable-stayed bridge in Moscow. It opened on 27 December 2007 as a part of Krasnopresnensky avenue . It is also the highest cable-stayed bridge in Europe. [1] The author of the project is the architect Nikolay Shumakov. [2]
Pages in category "Bridges in Moscow" The following 21 pages are in this category, out of 21 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. A. Andreyevsky Bridge; B.
The 1853 city plan shows a total of four such crossings. One was eventually demolished without replacement, three others correspond (west to east) to present-day Maly Ustinsky, Astakhovsky (Yauzsky) and Tessinsky bridges. Most important of these, Yauzsky Bridge, connecting city center with eastbound roads, was rebuilt in stone in 1804.
Patriarshy Bridge (Russian: Патриарший Мост /Patriarchal Bridge) is a steel pedestrian box girder bridge [1] that spans Moskva River and Vodootvodny Canal, connecting Cathedral of Christ the Saviour with Bersenevka in downtown Moscow, Russia (0.6 kilometers west from the Kremlin).
Handbook of International Bridge Engineering. CRC Press - Taylor & Francis Group. p. 635. CRC Press - Taylor & Francis Group. p. 635. ISBN 978-1-4398-1029-3 .