Yangpu Bridge

Yangpu Bridge
Coordinates31°15′25″N 121°32′29″E / 31.25694°N 121.54139°E / 31.25694; 121.54139
Carries6 lanes of Inner Ring Road
CrossesHuangpu River
LocaleShanghai, China
Characteristics
Designcable-stayed bridge
Total length8,354 metres (27,408 ft)
Width30.35 metres (100 ft)
Height223 metres (732 ft)
Longest span602 metres (1,975 ft)
History
Construction cost$259 million USD[1][unreliable source?]
OpenedOctober 1993
Location
Map

The Yangpu Bridge (simplified Chinese: 杨浦大桥; traditional Chinese: 楊浦大橋; pinyin: Yángpǔ Dàqiáo) is a sister bridge to the Nanpu Bridge, both crossing the Huangpu River in Shanghai, China. Yangpu is among the world's longest bridges, with a total length of 8354 meters. Its longest span of 602 m makes it one of the longest cable-stayed bridges in the world. It carries the Inner Ring Road from the Yangpu District in Puxi to the Pudong New Area. It was completed in September 1993 and opened in October. It is the last vehicular bridge over the Huangpu River before the river empties into the sea.

The bridge was designed by the Shanghai Municipal Engineering Design Institute, Shanghai Urban Construction College, and Shanghai Urban Construction Design Institute, with assistance from Holger S. Svensson. It was built by the Shanghai Huangpujiang Bridge Engineering Construction company.

It is a double-tower and double-cable-stayed bridge, with the bridge proper (the part that spans the river) 1172 m long. Its 30.35 m width carries six lanes of traffic (three for each direction). Its two pylons reach 223 m in height. The highest ship clearance is 48 m, a necessity due to the heavy river traffic.

As of 2006, it carries more than 100,000 vehicles per day.

The two main abutments support high, upside-down Y-shaped towers (or pylons) from which the supporting cables are strung. There are two two-meter-wide sightseeing sidewalks on both sides of the bridge.

East pylon

The bridge was originally unpainted; it was coated with red paint for the millennium. The name Yangpu Bridge (杨浦大桥) inscribed on each pylon was originally hand-written by Deng Xiaoping.

  1. ^ "Yangpu Bridge, Shanghai, China", roadtraffic-technology.com, retrieved 4 August 2014