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The Bogoda bridge is over 400 years old and made entirely from wooden planks, which are said to have come from one tree. [citation needed] It is an exclusive construction as it has an 2.4 metres (7.9 ft) tall tiled roof structure for its entire span of nearly 15 metres (49 ft) length with a 1.5 metres (4.9 ft) breadth.
The Mathematical Bridge is a wooden footbridge in the southwest of central Cambridge, England. It bridges the River Cam about one hundred feet northwest of Silver Street Bridge and connects two parts of Queens' College. Its official name is simply the Wooden Bridge [2] or Queens' Bridge. [3] It is a Grade II listed building. [1]
Bogoda Blyth, 1860, a genus of fishes in the family Priacanthidae, synonym of Priacanthus; Bogoda , a settlement in Kurunegala District, Sri Lanka; Bogoda Seelawimala Thera, a Buddhist priest, who is the current Chief Sangha Nayaka of Great Britain; Bogoda Wooden Bridge, the oldest surviving wooden bridge in Sri Lanka
The Project for Study on Improvement of Bridges Through Disaster Mitigating Measures for Large Scale Earthquakes in the Republic of the Philippines - Part 1 (PDF) (Report). December 2013. Part 2 (PDF) (Report). Part 3 (PDF) (Report). The Project for Improvement of Quality Management for Highway and Bridge Construction and Maintenance, Phase III ...
Two arms with timber superimposed are built on either side of the river, above the highest flood-level point, while being weighted to allow an increasingly large cantilevering, and solid wooden beams are then fixed on each end of the arms with wooden pegs. Bridges of this type were very common in mountainous region of India, Nepal and Tibet ...
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Bridges across the Jhelum in Srinagar city. Seven in green represent the old kadals. Brown are the newer bridges. The city of Srinagar in the Union Territory of Jammu and Kashmir, India, originally had seven wooden bridges across the Jhelum River. The seven bridges — Amira, Habba, Fateh, Zaina, Aali, Nawa and Safa — were constructed between the 15th and 18th century. This number remained ...