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bridge![]() Pont Neuf on the River Seine, Paris, France. Built in the 16th century, it is the oldest of the 32 bridges that span the Seine. ![]() The Lanchid Bridge in Budapest, Hungary, illuminated at dusk and casting reflections in the River Danube. A suspension bridge built by Adam Clark, it links the two halves of the city, Buda on the right bank of the Danube and Pest on the left bank. ![]() The Bay Bridge, San Francisco. Built in the 1930s, the San Francisco–Oakland Bay Bridge across San Francisco Bay is one of the longest combination bridges in the world and one of the great engineering feats of the 20th century. It has two suspension bridges extending over 13 km/8 mi, a cantilever bridge, and a viaduct to the Oakland side. ![]() Different types of bridge. Clapper bridges were some of the earliest bridges. Bridges need to be designed to support their own weight and the weight of traffic over them, so upward forces must considerably outweigh downward forces. They also have to resist torsion (twisting force) and withstand strong winds and the movement of traffic crossing. ![]() The building of New Bridge across the River Torridge, north of Bideford in Devon. The finished structure has eight spans with a total length of 641 m/2,104 ft and is 24 m/79 ft above the spring tide water level. The opening of the bridge has greatly eased the pressure of traffic on the town of Bideford. ![]() The Tamar Suspension Bridge. When it first opened to traffic in 1961, the Tamar Bridge, at 335 m/1,100 ft in length, was the longest suspension bridge in the UK. Linking the counties of Devon and Cornwall, it replaced the old ferry, which for centuries had crossed the River Tamar just downstream of where the bridge now stands. ![]() This 19th-century bridge across the River Liffey in Dublin, built for pedestrians only, was soon named the ‘Haypenny’ (Halfpenny) Bridge since a toll of half a penny was charged for all those who wished to cross the river from Bachelor's Walk to Aston Quay. ![]() O'Connell Bridge in central Dublin crosses the River Liffey just north of Trinity College and opens onto O'Connell Street, the city's main thoroughfare. When it was built in 1794–98, it was called Carlisle Bridge, but was renamed in 1882 when the statue of Daniel O'Connell, standing at the foot of the bridge, was unveiled. ![]() Miner's bridge near the city of Durango, capital of Durango state, north-central Mexico. Situated in the volcanic Sierra Madre Occidental, the state of Durango is abundant in silver, gold, sulphur, tin, mercury, antimony, and copper. One of the world's largest deposits of iron ore lies just north of the city. ![]() The Ben Franklin suspension bridge over the Delaware River links New Jersey with Philadelphia's city centre. The bridge, built in 1926, now has a computerized lighting system: sensors detect the motion of passing trains and illuminate the bridge's cables in turn to create an interesting wave effect. Structure that provides a continuous path or road over water, valleys, ravines, or above other roads. The basic designs and combinations of these are based on the way they bear the weight of the structure and its load. Beam, or girder, bridges are supported at each end by the ground with the weight thrusting downwards. Cantilever bridges are a complex form of girder in which only one end is supported. Arch bridges thrust outwards and downwards at their ends. Suspension bridges use cables under tension to pull inwards against anchorages on either side of the span, so that the span hangs from the main cables by a network of vertical cables. The cable-stayed bridge relies on diagonal cables connected directly between the bridge deck and supporting towers at each end. Some bridges are too low to allow traffic to pass beneath easily, so they are designed with movable parts; swing and draw bridges are examples. The construction of a bridge is also affected by aesthetics (the preferred or fashionable style at the time of its building) and practicalities such as the materials at hand. The appearance and construction of a bridge reflects the technology and tastes of the era in which it was built; for example, the simple, stocky Pont Neuf constructed over the River Seine in Paris in the 16th century contrasts sharply with the ornate neo-Gothic style of Tower Bridge, built in London in 1894. HistoryIn prehistory, people used logs or wove vines into ropes that were thrown across the obstacle. Clapper bridges, made from flat stones simply laid across or supported by piles of stones, were some of the earliest bridges. By 4000 BC arched structures of stone and/or brick were used in the Middle East, and the Romans built long, arched spans, many of which are still standing. Cast iron bridges were introduced in 1779. The Bessemer process produced steel that made it possible to build long-lived framed structures that support great weight over long spans.
bridgeCard game derived from whist, played by two pairs of players using all 52 cards in a standard deck. First played towards the end of the 19th century, it originally took the form of auction bridge, which was later replaced by contract bridge.
bridge
bridge
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