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It was built from 1997 to 2004, and it is the largest rigid-frame bridge in Japan and the third largest in the world. [1] Images of the bridge have been widely circulated on the internet, owing to its seemingly steep nature when photographed from a distance with a telephoto lens , but in actuality, it has a less pronounced, 6.1% gradient in the ...
Fudo Bridge 不動大橋: Lowest girder depth (6m) / longest span (155m) for composite truss in Japan Tanaka Prize (2010) 590 m (1,940 ft) Extradosed Composite steel/concrete deck, concrete pylons 63+125+155+155+88
The road and bridge route was designed with an integrated cycle lane linking Onomichi in Hiroshima Prefecture with Imabari in Ehime Prefecture. The cycle route is approximately 70 kilometres (43 miles) in length, including bridge access ramps, and since opening has become one of Japan's most popular long-distance cycle routes .
Green: Great Seto Bridge Yellow: Kobe-Awaji-Naruto Expressway Red: Nishiseto Expressway When in 1889 the first railway in Shikoku was completed between Marugame and Kotohira, a member of the Prefectural Parliament, Jinnojo Ōkubo (大久保諶之丞, Ōkubo Jinnojo, 1849–1891), stated in his speech at the opening ceremony: "The four provinces of Shikoku are like so many remote islands.
Jōgakura Bridge (城ヶ倉大橋, Jōgakura-ōhashi) is a 360-meter-long (1,180 ft) deck arch bridge in the southern Hakkōda Mountains in the city of Aomori in Aomori Prefecture, Japan. It carries National Route 394 at a height of 122 meters (400 ft) above Jōgakura Creek.
Download as PDF; Printable version; In other projects Wikimedia Commons; Wikidata item; ... Japan bridge (structure) stubs (44 P) Pages in category "Bridges in Japan"
The bridge spans the Totsukawa river (Kumano River), and connects Totsukawa village and Tanize (Uenoji), which lies on the other side of the bridge. [4] The bridge is 54 m (177 ft) from the surface of the river and has a deck spanning 297.7 m (977 ft) long. [2] [4] In 1954, the construction of the bridge was finished. [1]
natalie419, flickr A new rollercoaster in a Japanese resort town beneath Mount Fuji has bragging rights: Over a little less than a half mile of track, the Takabisha features a bundle of twists and ...