El Mek Nimr Bridge
El Mek Nimr Bridge | |
---|---|
Coordinates | 15°36′50″N 32°31′51″E / 15.613758°N 32.530903°E |
Crosses | Blue Nile |
Locale | Khartoum |
Characteristics | |
Total length | 642.5 m |
History | |
Construction start | 2005 |
Construction end | 2007 |
Opened in 2007, the El Mek Nimr Bridge links the downtown area of Khartoum, Sudan with the adjacent city of Khartoum North across the Blue Nile river. It is named after Mek Nimr, a leader of the Ja'alin tribe in northern Sudan, who infamously burned the son of Muhammad Ali Pasha, Ismail, and his cortege when they invaded Sudan from Egypt in 1822.
External links[]
- Structurae: El Mek Nimr Bridge
- Sudan Online (archived) - Sudan Online
Coordinates: 15°36′50.0″N 32°31′58.7″E / 15.613889°N 32.532972°E
Categories:
- Bridges in Sudan
- Bridges over the Nile
- Buildings and structures in Khartoum
- Khartoum North
- Sudanese building and structure stubs
- African bridge (structure) stubs