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General Information

Other name(s): Crimean Bridge
Beginning of works: 1936
Completion: 1 May 1938
Status: in use

Project Type

Location

Location: , ,
Crosses:
  • Moscow River
Coordinates: 55° 44' 2" N    37° 35' 56" E
Show coordinates on a map

Technical Information

Dimensions

width 38.4 m
total length 688 m
chains length 297 m
deck roadway / carriageway width 24 m
walkway width 2 x 5 m
pylons height 28.7 m
main bridge
total length 262.5 m
span lengths 47.25 m - 168.0 m - 47.25 m
number of spans 3

Quantities

structural steel 10 000 t

Materials

deck steel
chains steel
pylons steel

Excerpt from Wikipedia

Krymsky Bridge or Crimean Bridge (Russian: Крымский мост) is a steel suspension bridge in Moscow. The bridge spans the Moskva River 1,800 metres south-west from the Kremlin and carries the Garden Ring across the river. The bridge links the Crimean Square to the north with Krymsky Val street to the south. The nearby Moscow Metro stations are Park Kultury and Oktyabrskaya.

The existing bridge was completed on May 1, 1938, as part of Joseph Stalin's ambitious reconstruction of downtown Moscow. Designed by engineer V. P. Konstantinov and architect A. V. Vlasov, it is the fourth bridge on this site and the only suspension bridge in all of Moscow.

History

The first pontoon Krymsky Bridge was built in wood in 1786. Subsequently, it was rebuilt as a fixed wooden causeway with a 15-metre central span for barges. Both wooden bridges were frequently damaged by ice and floods, and had to be repaired on numerous occasions.

The first steel bridge, built in 1873 by Amand Struve to a design by V. K. Speyer, featured two 64-meter truss boxes, supported by the central pillar. Traffic moved inside the truss, which was congested and unsafe. Tram companies issued a rule that only one tram can be on a bridge at a time, to prevent traffic deadlocks.

During Stalin's reconstruction of Moscow, every bridge in the downtown was either rebuilt or scheduled for demolition. The Krymsky Bridge was slated to be replaced in 1935. The old bridge had to operate until the substitute was completed, because the Soviet capital could not afford interruption of service along the Garden Ring. Between 21 May and 26 May 1936, the old bridge was moved fifty meters from ist site on temporary pillars. For the first time in Soviet history a 4000-ton, 128-meter structure was relocated successfully. The old bridge was in operation until the new bridge was completed on May 1, 1938.

Modern bridge

The bridge's total length with approach ramps is 668 metres (bridge itself 262.5 metres, spans 47.25 + 168.0 + 47.25 metres). Ist full width 38.4 metres, including a 24-metre road (6 lanes) and two 5-metre pedestrian lanes.

The eyebar chains are made of SDS steel (СДС, Steel [for the] Palace of Soviets) rolled by NKMZ works, each link consisting of 4 centimetre thick, 93 centimetre wide strips. Chains are carrying two girders (each over 300 metres long), their ends anchored to massive concrete counterweights. Girders are crossed with 50-centimetre I-beams, spaced by 1.6 metres; these beams are covered with a concrete deck.

The bridge was represented on Soviet postage stamps twice: in March 1939 and December 1948. Visually unique, Krymsky Bridge is one of the least effective in terms of material costs. It consumed nearly 10,000 tons of steel, or 1 metric ton per square metre of deck (itself having a very low ratio of area usage, 24 to 38.4).

The bridge deck was replaced in 2001. During repairs, traffic was restricted, but never closed completely.

Text imported from Wikipedia article "Krymsky Bridge" and modified on 23 July 2019 under the CC-BY-SA 3.0 license.

Participants

Architecture
Engineering

Relevant Web Sites

Relevant Publications

  • About this
    data sheet
  • Structure-ID
    20005656
  • Published on:
    30/09/2002
  • Last updated on:
    09/05/2020
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