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Lions' Bridge, Sofia

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Carries
  
Pedestrian and trams

Locale
  
Sofia, Bulgaria

Design
  
Stone

Opened
  
1891

Location
  
Sofia

Crosses
  
Vladayska River

Official name
  
Лъвов мост

Width
  
18 metres (59 ft)

Total length
  
32 m

Lions' Bridge, Sofia

Address
  
Lion's Bridge, bulevard "Knyaginya Maria Luiza", 1202 Sofia, Bulgaria

Hours
  
Open today · Open 24 hoursSaturdayOpen 24 hoursSundayOpen 24 hoursMondayOpen 24 hoursTuesdayOpen 24 hoursWednesdayOpen 24 hoursThursdayOpen 24 hoursFridayOpen 24 hours

Similar
  
Eagles' Bridge - Sofia, Sofia Central Station, Central Sofia Market Hall, Banya Bashi Mosque, St Nedelya Church

Lions' Bridge (Bulgarian: Лъвов мост; Lavov most) is a bridge over the Vladaya River in the centre of Sofia, the capital of Bulgaria, built 1889-1891 by Czech architect Václav Prošek, his brother Jozef and his cousins Bohdan and Jiří. It gives the name to the important and busy junction of Marie Louise Boulevard and Slivnitsa Boulevard, at which it is located, connecting the Central Railway Station with the city centre and marking its northern border.

Overview

The bridge was built from stone at the place of an older bridge called Sharen Most (Шарен мост, "Motley Bridge") because it was decorated with red and yellow stripes. The name of Lions' Bridge comes from the four bronze sculptures of lions, its most recognizable feature. All metal elements of the bridge were produced by the Austrian company of Rudolph Philipp Waagner, and electric lights were installed in the early 1900s. The entire construction of the bridge cost 260,000 golden leva.

The Prošek family also designed and built the similar but eagle-themed Eagles' Bridge marking the city centre's eastern border in 1891.

One of the bronze lions is depicted on the reverse of the Bulgarian 20 lev banknote, issued in 1999 and 2007.

Since 2012 the area around Lions' Bridge is served by the Lavov most station of Sofia Metro line 2.

In 2014, a major reconstruction of the square was completed, converting the intersection into a two-level interchange. The automobile traffic was removed from the bridge, reserving it only for trams and pedestrians.

References

Lions' Bridge, Sofia Wikipedia