Girish Mahajan (Editor)

Puente de Occidente

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Crosses
  
Cauca River

Total length
  
291 m

Location
  
Santa Fe de Antioquia

Materials
  
Wood, Steel

Owner
  
Antioquia Department

Clearance below
  
4.6 m

Body of water
  
Cauca River

Puente de Occidente

Carries
  
Pedestrians, motorcycles, cars, small trucks

Locale
  
Between Santa Fe de Antioquia and Olaya

Named for
  
Western Antioquia subregion of Antioquia Department

Heritage status
  
Fué declarado monumento nacional en el año de 1967.

Address
  
Olaya, Antioquia, Colombia

Bridge type
  
Suspension bridge, Cable-stayed bridge

Similar
  
El Peñón de Guatapé, Cathedral Basilica of the Imma, Iglesia de Santa Bárbara, Barefoot Park, Embalse Peñol‑Guatapé

Puente de occidente santa fe de antioquia 2 west bridge two


The Puente de Occidente (Bridge of the West), so named because it is located in western Antioquia, Colombia, is a suspension bridge that connects the municipalities of Olaya and Santa Fe de Antioquia, east and west of the Cauca River, respectively. At the time it was considered the seventh largest suspension bridge worldwide.

Contents

The bridge is a single suspension span supported from four pyramidal towers - two on each bank of the river - with each tower anchoring two cables. The span has a main central section which cars and smaller trucks can cross, and two pedestrian paths on either side of the central roadway. All three paths have wood upper surfaces. Construction started in 1887, under the direction of engineer José María Villa , after authorization by Marcelino Vélez, governor of Antioquia. The cables and other steel parts were purchased from England, while the towers were constructed of local materials. The Puente de Occidente was initially open only to pedestrian traffic; later, vehicles were allowed.

While today there are other, much longer suspension bridges in South America, originally the Puente de Occidente was the longest of its kind in the continent. It was declared a National Monument of Colombia on 26 November 1978. José María Villa, who had been born nearby in Sopetrán, studied engineering at the Stevens Institute of Technology in New Jersey; after finishing his studies in the United States, he participated in the construction of the Brooklyn Bridge. The structural system of the Puente de Occidente is similar to the suspension/cable-stayed hybrid used in the Brooklyn Bridge.

Significant restoration was performed in the early part of 2014.

Antioquia puente de occidente qu belleza


References

Puente de Occidente Wikipedia