Harman Patil (Editor)

Mannar Bridge

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Opened
  
18 March 2010

Width
  
10 m

Construction cost
  
2.46 billion LKR

Total length
  
157 m

Location
  
Mannar, Sri Lanka

Mannar Bridge

Carries
  
Motor vehicles on the A14 highway and pedestrians

Locale
  
Mannar, Mannar District, Sri Lanka

Maintained by
  
Road Development Authority

Inaugurated
  
March 18, 2010 (2010-03-18)

Owner
  
Ministry of Ports and Shipping

Similar
  
St Sebastian's Cathedral, Mannar fort, Sangupiddy Bridge, Adam's Bridge, Pamban Bridge

Mannar Bridge is a road bridge in north-western Sri Lanka. It connects Mannar Island with the mainland and is the only road bridge to the densely populated island.

Contents

Mannar bridge and causeway opened 18 3 2010


History

A narrow single lane bridge and causeway linking Mannar island to the mainland was built in the 1930s. Parts of the bridge collapsed in 1990 after it was blown up by the rebel Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam. A temporary bailey bridge was built but it could not accommodate vehicles over 10 tonnes.

In 2007 plans were drawn to build a new bridge on the site. Construction of a new bridge began in 2007 but was halted in January 2008 as the Sri Lankan Civil War flared up again. Construction recommenced following the end of the civil war and was completed in March 2010. At the same time the causeway was extended to 3.14 km long and 11m wide. The bridge was formally opened on 18 March 2010.

The two lane bridge is 157 m (515 ft) long and 10.4 m (34 ft) wide. The bridge cost 2.46 billion rupees (US$22 million) and was financed by a grant from the Japan International Cooperation Agency.

The bridge is part of the A14 Medawachchiya-Talaimannar highway.

References

Mannar Bridge Wikipedia