Nanpu Bridge

Nanpu Bridge

南浦大桥
Coordinates31°12′27″N 121°30′03″E / 31.20750°N 121.50083°E / 31.20750; 121.50083
Carries7 lanes (road traffic)
CrossesHuangpu River
LocaleZhongqiu Jhiazhai, Shanghai, China
Official nameNanpu Dàqiáo
Characteristics
DesignCable-stayed bridge
Total length8,359 metres (27,425 ft)
Longest span423 metres (1,388 ft)
History
Opened1991
Location
Map

The Nanpu Bridge (simplified Chinese: 南浦大桥; traditional Chinese: 南浦大橋; pinyin: Nánpǔ Dàqiáo), in Shanghai, China, sister bridge to the Yangpu Bridge, is one of the main bridges in Shanghai, forming part of Shanghai's elevated inner ring road.[1]

The cable-stayed 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.[2] The engineering of the bridge is noted as the start of modern long span cable-stayed bridge construction in China.[1][3][4] The construction cost amounted to RMB 820 million.[5]

It has a main span of 428 meters (1,388 ft), shorter than its sister bridge. It is the 57th longest cable-stayed bridge in the world, opened to the public in 1991.[2]

Nanpu Bridge spiral approach

The bridge's double spiral approach on the Puxi side was listed as the world's largest, with a diameter of 180 meter and a total distance of 7.5 km.[6]

  1. ^ a b Xiang, Zhongfu; Xu, Wei; Liu, Anshuang; Meng, Fanchao (2023-12-23). 70 Years of China’s Bridges. Springer Nature. ISBN 978-981-99-2878-1.
  2. ^ a b "南浦大桥,三十而立". 澎湃 (in Chinese). 上海东方报业有限公司. 2021-12-04. Retrieved 2024-02-11.[failed verification]
  3. ^ Ma, Biao; Lin, Yuanpei (2009). "Cable-Stayed Bridges in Shanghai where Chinese Recent Major Bridges Launched". IABSE Workshop Shanghai 2009: 201–211. doi:10.2749/222137809796089250.
  4. ^ Yang, Yeong-Bin; Chang, Dyi-Wei; Dzeng, Dzong-Chwang; Huang, Ping-Hsun (2013-10-11), Chen, Wai-Fah; Duan, Lian (eds.), "Bridge Engineering in Chinese Taipei", Handbook of International Bridge Engineering, CRC Press, pp. 1087–1124, doi:10.1201/b15520-25&type=chapterpdf, ISBN 978-1-4398-1029-3, retrieved 2025-02-20
  5. ^ '97 Shanghai Basic Facts. 五洲传播出版社. 1997. ISBN 978-7-80113-225-3.
  6. ^ Records, Guinness World (2014-09-11). Guinness World Records 2015. Guinness World Records. ISBN 978-1-908843-70-8.

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