Jones Bridge | |
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Coordinates | 14°35′45″N 120°58′38.3″E / 14.59583°N 120.977306°E |
Carried | Motor vehicles, pedestrians and bicycles |
Crossed | Pasig River |
Locale | Manila, Philippines |
Official name | William A. Jones Memorial Bridge |
Other name(s) | Banzai Bridge (c. 1942) |
Named for | William Atkinson Jones |
Maintained by | City Government of Manila Department of Public Works and Highways - North Manila District Engineering Office[1] |
Preceded by | Binondo–Intramuros Bridge |
Followed by | MacArthur Bridge |
Characteristics | |
Design | Neoclassical arch bridge (1919–45) Girder bridge[2] (1945–present) |
Material | Steel-reinforced concrete |
Total length | 115 m (377 ft)[1] |
Width | 16.70 m (54.8 ft)[1] |
Traversable? | yes |
Longest span | 300 m (984 ft)[3] |
No. of spans | 3 |
Piers in water | 2 |
Load limit | 20 t (20,000 kg) |
Clearance below | 7.5 m (25 ft) at mean tide[4] |
No. of lanes | 4 (2 per direction) |
History | |
Designer | Juan M. Arellano (1919–20) |
Constructed by | City Government of Manila (1919–20) Philippine Bureau of Public Works (1920, 1945) |
Construction start | 1919 |
Construction end | 1920 |
Inaugurated | 1921 |
Rebuilt | 1946 |
Collapsed | February 1945 |
Replaced | Puente de España |
Location | |
The William A. Jones Memorial Bridge, commonly known as the Jones Bridge, is an arched girder bridge that spans the Pasig River in Manila, Philippines. It is named after the United States legislator William Atkinson Jones, who served as the chairman of the U.S. Insular Affairs House Committee, which had previously exercised jurisdiction over the Philippines and was the principal author of the Jones Law that gave the country legislative autonomy from the United States. Built to replace the historic Puente de España (Bridge of Spain) in the 1910s, the bridge connects Quintin Paredes Road in the Binondo district to Padre Burgos Avenue in the Ermita district.
Originally designed by Filipino architect Juan M. Arellano using French Neoclassical architecture, the first incarnation of the bridge features three arches resting on two heavy piers, adorned by faux-stone and concrete ornaments, as well as four sculptures on concrete plinths allegorically representing motherhood and nationhood. The original bridge was destroyed during World War II by retreating Japanese troops and was reconstructed in 1946 by the U.S. and Philippine public works. The reconstructed bridge retained the three arches and two piers but removed all the ornaments. The bridge was first partially restored in 1998. In 2019, the City Government of Manila began a rehabilitation project to "restore" the Jones Bridge to its near-original design using Beaux-Arts architecture similar to that of Pont Alexandre III in Paris and the return of the three extant La Madre Filipina sculptures (the 4th requiring reconstruction).