Zhivopisny Bridge

Summary

Zhivopisny Bridge (Russian: Живописный Мост, lit. Picturesque bridge) is a cable-stayed bridge that spans Moskva River in north-western Moscow, Russia. It is the first cable-stayed bridge in Moscow. It opened on 27 December 2007 as a part of Krasnopresnensky avenue [ru]. It is also the highest cable-stayed bridge in Europe.[1] The author of the project is the architect Nikolay Shumakov.[2]

Zhivopisny Bridge. April 2010.
Zhivopisny Bridge. March 2008.

Design and specifications edit

The bridge is unique in that most of its length runs along the river, not across it (see the site plan[3]). Thus the bridge and highway it carries will bypass the protected territory of Serebryany Bor island.

The total length of an S-shaped deck exceeds 1.5 kilometers, including a 409.5-meter long, 47-meter wide main section running 30 meters above and along the centerline of river Moskva.[4] The main pylon is a 105-meter high arch across the river, carrying the weight of deck through 78 cables

Under the top of the arch, there is a disk-like structure that was intended to house a restaurant. The restaurant project is now abandoned due to fire safety concerns and a lack of investment.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Над излучиной Москвы-реки вознесется арка живописного моста, RusTunnel, 5 December 2006. Retrieved 29 January 2008.
  2. ^ "Живописный мост признали мировым шедевром". Москва 24. 2017-08-01. Retrieved 2018-05-11.
  3. ^ Site plan, archived from the original on June 3, 2006)
  4. ^ Татьяна Белова. "Вантовый мост в Крылатском — единственный в мире". Архитектурные сооружения мира. Retrieved 2018-05-11.

External links edit

  • Metal Spider Panorama
  • Contractor's site
  • Photos
  • Photos of bridge under construction
  • Photos of bridge under construction
  • August 2006 photographs
  • Panorama: Summer 2006
  • "Zhivopisny Bridge: Highest Cable-Stayed Bridge In Europe" (PDF).[permanent dead link] (8.62 MB), CR May 9 - Construction Review Magazine, p. 12

55°46′38″N 37°26′48″E / 55.77722°N 37.44667°E / 55.77722; 37.44667