Kurushima-Kaikyō Bridge

Kurushima-kaikyō Bridge
来島海峡大橋
Coordinates 34°07′14″N 132°59′51″E / 34.12056°N 132.99750°E / 34.12056; 132.99750Coordinates: 34°07′14″N 132°59′51″E / 34.12056°N 132.99750°E / 34.12056; 132.99750
Carries 4 lanes of roadway
moped lane
bicycle/pedestrian lane
Crosses Seto Inland Sea
Locale Imabari, Ehime, Japan
Maintained by Honshū-Shikoku Bridge Project
Characteristics
Design Suspension bridge
Total length 4,015 metres (13,173 ft)
Width 27 metres (89 ft)
History
Construction start May 15, 1988
Opened May 1, 1999
Kurushima-kaikyō Bridge
Location in Japan

The Kurushima-Kaikyō Bridge (来島海峡大橋, Kurushima Kaikyō Ō-hashi), which connects the island of Ōshima to the main part of Shikoku, is the world's longest suspension bridge structure[1] and was completed in 1999. The bridge is part of the Shimanami Kaidō, an expressway that spans a series of islands and connects Hiroshima Prefecture in Honshū to Ehime Prefecture in Shikoku. The bridge and the expressway were both conceived by the Honshū-Shikoku Bridge Project.

Construction

View of the roadway

The Kurushima-Kaikyō Bridge consists of three successive suspension bridges with six towers and four anchorages. There is a shared anchorage that joins each suspension bridge to the next. Its construction is similar to the western portion of San Francisco–Oakland Bay Bridge which is two successive suspension bridges with four towers and one shared anchorage. The bridge's total length of 4,015 metres (13,173 ft), is just a little longer than the total length of the two tower Akashi Kaikyō Bridge, which is 3,911 metres (12,831 ft).

See also

Notes

  1. Virola, Juhani (November 2002). "Two Millennia - Two Long-Span Suspension Bridges". ATSE Focus No 124. Australian Academy of Technological Sciences and Engineering. Retrieved 2008-04-05.
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