Puente del Alamillo
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The Alamillo Bridge in Seville, Andalusia (Spain) spans the Canal de Alfonso XIII in Seville, allowing access to La Cartuja, an island between the canal and the Guadalquivir River. The bridge was constructed as part of infrastructure improvements for Expo 92, which was held on a large site on the island. Construction of the bridge began in 1989 and was completed in 1992 from a design by Santiago Calatrava.
The bridge is of the cantilever spar cable-stayed bridge type and consists of a single pylon, counterbalancing a 200 m span with thirteen lengths of cables. The original intent was to build two symmetrical bridges on either side of the island, but in the end, the Alamillo's singular design has proved most striking.
This bridge represents the soaring aspirations of the city of Seville in preparation for Expo 92.
Calatrava's Sundial Bridge at Turtle Bay located in Redding, California (2004), and Chords Bridge in Jerusalem, Israel, are similar in design to the Alamillo Bridge.
[edit] See also
- Puente de la Mujer for another bridge by this architect.
- Sundial Bridge at Turtle Bay, also by Calatrava
- Mariánský most - a similar bridge in Ústí nad Labem in Czech Republic. Built in 1998, this bridge was very well rated because of its design.
- Puente Atirantado a similar cable stayed bridge near Monterrey in Mexico, built in 2003.
[edit] External links
- Puente del Alamillo on en.broer.no
- Alamillo Bridge by Santiago Calatrava
- Alamillo Bridge Seville - Sevilla
- Puente del Alamillo in Factoría Urbana: Photos and technical information about the bridge
- Alamillo Bridge in the Structurae database