Peter the Great Bridge

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Peter the Great Bridge
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Peter the Great Bridge

Peter the Great Bridge (Russian: Мост Петра Великого, Most Petra Velikogo), also known as Bolsheokhtinsky Bridge (Russian: Большеохтинский мост) or (colloquially) as Okhtinsky Bridge (Russian: Охтинский мост), is a bridge across the Neva River in Saint Petersburg, Russia. The bridge's length is 334 meters, the width is 23 meters. The bridge features only three spans, the central one can be drawn.

[edit] History

First the idea to build a bridge near the Okhta river was circulated in 1829. Even before the Saint Petersburg was founded, there were settelments in the Okhta region, and with the raise of the city, it quickly grew to become big industrial center. Powder factories and shipyards existed here. However, in XIX century, Okhta district wasn't officially part of Saint Petersburg. The bridge was essential for the developing industry, and Nicholas I approved the bridge as part of strategic city development plan. However, at that time the necessary funds were not found.

Next time the possibility of building a bridge was raised in 1860-th, when the the Emperor approved the decision to join the Okhta district to Saint Petersburg. The city Duma organized international contest. There were total of 16 projects submitted including projects from France, Germany, Austria, Spain and USA. There also were three projects submitted out of contest. And one of these out of contest projects was declared winner. That was the project by professor of Nikolaevskay engineering academy Krivoshein and military engineer Apyshkov. But even after selecting the winning project, the work didn't start for a long time.

In spring of 1907, the passenger ship Arkhangelk which transported people from the left bank of Neva to the right bank has sank. This tragic event set things in motion, and on September 24, 1907 the contract for building the bridge was signed. The ceremony of bridge founding took place on June 26, 1909 - exactly two hunrend years from the Battle of Poltava. Hence the bridge was named after the triumphator of that battle - Emperor Peter the Great Bridge. The bridge was open for traffic on October 26, 1911.

In 1956 the bridge was renamed Bolsheokhtinsky after the Big Okhta river, but in 2004 the original name was partially restored, although the title of Emperor was dropped from the name. Today people call this bridge both Peter the Great Bridge and Bolsheokhtinsky Bridge.

[edit] Trivia

The Tupolev 124 shortly after ditching, with the Okhta Bridge in the background
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The Tupolev 124 shortly after ditching, with the Okhta Bridge in the background
  • The city rumor has it that one of the clenches in the bridge is made from pure gold, and colored to be the same color as the rest of clenches. Unfortunately it is virtually impossible to verify, since the bridge has more than one million clenches.
  • The bridge is a target of an allusion in the following phrase in song "Sailor" from the Aquarium's album The Triange (1981): Beautiful as Okhtinsky Bridge. (Also used in Sergei Debizhev's Dva Kapitana II [1] with nightly footage of the bridge and nonsensical comment)
  • In 1961, an Aeroflot Tupolev Tu-124 landed on the Neva just behind the bridge in what remains one of the very few succesful controlled water landings in aviation history with no lives lost.

[edit] Sources

Петра Великого (Большеохтинский) мост (in Russian)

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