Rahul Sharma (Editor)

President Bridge

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
No. of spans
  
25

Daily traffic
  
40,000 vehicles/day

Opened
  
24 November 2009

Body of water
  
Volga River

Construction begin
  
1986

Total length
  
5,825 m

Width
  
25 m

Number of spans
  
25

President Bridge

Address
  
Prezidentskiy Most, Ulyanovsk, Ulyanovskaya oblast', Russia, 432027

Similar
  
Volgograd Bridge, Pomnik litery Ё, Kineshma Bridge, Kostroma rail bridge, Syzran Bridge

Fishing at and near president bridge in savannah ga 8 28 16


The President Bridge (Russian: Президентский мост) is a truss bridge that crosses over the river Volga in Ulyanovsk Oblast, Russia, connecting the city of Ulyanovsk with the east side of the Ulyanovsk Oblast. It is the second longest bridge in Russia, and one of the longest bridges in Europe, with a length of 5.825 kilometres (3.619 mi), and 12.98 kilometres (8.07 mi) including the connecting highway .

Contents

It has 25 spans of 221 metres (725 ft) and weighs 4,000 tons. The bridge's capacity is over 40,000 vehicles per day.

President bridge bridge baby


History

The new bridge was built as the aging Ulyanovsk Bridge (built 1913–1916) could no longer cope with the growing traffic. It was constructed as a part of a federal modernization program and aimed at linking the European part of Russia with the Urals, Siberia and the Far East.

The design of the bridge began in 1980, and the construction in 1986, originally planned to take nine years. The first pillars were installed in 1988, and the first span in 1992. It cost a total of 38.4 billion rubles (2008 prices).

The opening ceremony took place on 24 November 2009, and was attended by the Russian President Dmitry Medvedev and Ilham Aliyev, President of Azerbaijan. At this stage only the first part of the bridge was opened; the lower tier of the bridge is scheduled to open in 2012. It took more than 23 years to build the bridge; completion was delayed significantly due to lack of funding and economic difficulties following Russia's transition after the collapse of the Soviet Union.

References

President Bridge Wikipedia