Tianxingzhou Yangtze River Bridge
Tianxingzhou Bridge 武汉天兴洲长江大桥 | |
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Coordinates | 30°39′25″N 114°24′18″E / 30.656889°N 114.404969°ECoordinates: 30°39′25″N 114°24′18″E / 30.656889°N 114.404969°E |
Carries | 6 lanes of the Wuhan Third Ring Road 2 tracks of Wuhan–Guangzhou High-Speed Railway 2 tracks of the Hefei–Wuhan High-Speed Railway |
Crosses | Yangtze River |
Locale | Wuhan, Hubei, China |
Characteristics | |
Design | Cable-stayed |
Total length | 4,657 metres (15,279 ft) |
Height | 190 metres (620 ft) |
Longest span | 504 metres (1,654 ft) |
History | |
Construction start | 2004 |
Construction cost | CN¥11 billion |
Opened | December 26, 2009 |
Location | |
The Tianxingzhou Yangtze River Bridge (Chinese: 武汉天兴洲长江大桥) is a combined road and rail bridge across the Yangtze River in the city of Wuhan, the capital of the Hubei Province of China.
The bridge crosses the Yangtze in the northeastern part of the city, a few kilometers downstream of the Second Wuhan Yangtze River Bridge. Its name is due to the Tianxing Island (天兴洲, Tianxingzhou), above which it crosses the river. Built at the cost of CN¥11 billion, the 4,657-meter cable suspension bridge was opened on December 26, 2009,[1] in time for the opening of the Wuhan railway station. The bridges main span measures 504 metres (1,654 ft), the longest combined road and rail cable-stayed span in the world.[2]
Description[]
The bridge is a combined road and rail bridge; it has 4 railroad tracks and 6 vehicular traffic lanes.[3] It is the northeastern (downstream) Yangtze crossing for Wuhan's Third Ring Road (the southwestern, upstream, crossing is the Baishazhou Bridge).
As of 2012 there are at least half a dozen of road crossings of the Yangtze River in Wuhan, as well as a subway line under the river. The Tianxingzhou Bridge is only the second railway crossing. It carries the Wuhan–Guangzhou high-speed railway across the river and allows trains to cross the river at speeds up to 250 kilometres per hour (160 mph).[3] It also makes it possible for some of the high-speed trains arriving to Wuhan from the east over the Hefei–Wuhan railway to cross the river and to reach Wuhan railway station (instead of their usual destination, Hankou railway station).
See also[]
- Yangtze River bridges and tunnels
- List of largest cable-stayed bridges
- List of tallest bridges in the world
References[]
- ^ Tianxingzhou highway-railway Bridge in Wuhan opens to traffic Archived 2010-03-30 at the Wayback Machine. english.cnhubei.com 2009-12-28
- ^ "Archived copy" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2016-03-03. Retrieved 2013-03-19.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
- ^ Jump up to: a b China's new highway-railway bridge sets world records, www.chinaview.cn 2008-09-10
- Bridges in Wuhan
- Bridges completed in 2009
- Bridges over the Yangtze River
- Road-rail bridges in China
- Cable-stayed bridges in China