Sundial Bridge at Turtle Bay

From Freepedia

Sundial Bridge
Official nameSundial Bridge at Turtle Bay
CarriesBicycles and pedestrians
CrossesSacramento River
LocaleRedding, California
Maintained byUnknown
DesignCantilever spar cable-stayed bridge
Longest spanunknown
Total length700Ft
Width23 ft
Vertical clearanceunknown
Clearance below26 m
Opening dateJuly 4, 2004

The Sundial Bridge is a cantilever spar cable-stayed bridge that spans the Sacramento River in Redding, California. It was designed by Santiago Calatrava and completed in 2004 at a cost of US$23,000,000.

Similar to his earlier (1992) design (the Puente del Alamillo in Seville, Spain), this subtype uniquely does not balance the forces by using a symmetrical arrangement of cable forces on each side of the tower; instead it uses an angled cantilever tower loaded by cable stays on only one side. This requires that the spar resist bending and torsional forces and that its foundation resists overturning. While this leads to a less structurally efficient structure the architectural statement is considered dramatic.

This pedestrian bridge features a single 217 foot (66 metre) mast that serves as a sundial, which can be read in a garden to the north of the bridge. It connects the two sections of Turtle Bay Exploration Park.

The deck is surfaced with transparent structural glass, with a view of the water below as one crosses. The walkway and river are illuminated from beneath the deck at night. It is 700 feet (213 m) in length and crosses the river without once touching the water. The cable stays are not centered on the walkway but instead divide the bridge into a major and minor path.

Image gallery

See also

External links

Sundial Bridge official site
Sundial Bridge Virtual Tour



Views
Personal tools
Similar Links