Pont National

Pont National

National Bridge
Crosses Seine
Locale Paris, France
Design arch bridge
Total length 188,5
Width 34
Opened 1853
The Pont Royal in Paris was known as the Pont National from 1792 to 1804, and there was also a Pont National in Brest until 1944.

The pont National (named pont Napoléon-III from its construction until 1870) is a road and rail bridge across the Seine in Paris, to the east of the XIIe and XIIIe arrondissements. With a total length of 188.5m, it is made up of 5 masonry arches. Its rail part carries the Petite Ceinture, now disused, and its road part links boulevard Poniatowski to boulevard Masséna. Its nearest Paris Métro stations are Porte de Charenton and Cour Saint-Émilion.

History

It was built between 1852 and 1853 as a railway bridge (to allow the Petite Ceinture line to cross the river) and to link the "enceintes" on the two sides of the river. Its architects were E. Couche, Petit, Gaspard, and Netter. Its width was doubled with an addition on the upstream side in 1936

See also

External links

Bridge location on the Seine:

Bridge location
Downstream:
Pont de Tolbiac
Upstream:
Pont amont