This article needs to be updated.(December 2011) |
Kyiv, historically situated on the right bank of the Dnieper River, now covers both banks of the river whose width, as it flows through the city, reaches several hundred meters. Additionally, several tributaries join the Dnieper inside or just north or south of the historic city. Currently there are eight bridges spanning across the river and a few dozen bridges across the canals and Dnieper tributaries.
Due to the location and the width of the river, the bridges have always been a very attractive and hard to realize option throughout the long history of Kyiv.
Temporary floater bridges were known to have existed since the 12th century. Stationary bridges existed in Kyiv from the mid-19th century, but none of them survived the turbulent events that followed the 1917 Russian Revolution.
According to the chronicles,[ clarification needed ] the earliest floating bridge across the Dnieper River in the area was built in the 1115. It was located near Vyshhorod or, according to different accounts, near the Vydubychi Monastery. Records exist about another floater in the 17th century with stationary approaches from the shores.
Того же лѣта устрои мостъ чересъ Днѣпръ
— Primary Chronicle, intranslation: The same summer there was established a bridge over Dnieper
Such bridges could only be temporary, as the Dnieper freezes over in most winters at Kyiv's latitude, and ice drift each spring remain a concern even for modern bridges. Additionally, the river current was especially strong before the Dnieper was dammed in the 20th century. Therefore, the cross-river traffic was carried by boats and ferries for many centuries.
From the mid-19th century to the mid-20th century, Kyiv was served by two stationary bridges. Both bridges had similar fates. Built at the times of the Industrial Revolution in the Russian Empire these engineering masterpieces of their time survived World War I and the Russian Civil War. Both were blown up in 1920 by the Polish troops retreating from Kyiv following the joint Polish-Ukrainian anti-Soviet Kyiv offensive.
The first stationary bridge in Kyiv was built between 1848 and 1853. [1] This 770 m (2,526 ft)-long Nicholas Bridge was a chain suspension bridge rested on five pillars. Being one of the largest and most beautiful bridges in Europe, it was the pride of the city until it was blown up in 1920 by the Polish troops. The heavily damaged bridge was not subject to the restoration and in 1925 a new bridge was constructed in its place under the name Yevheniya Bosch Bridge (see below). [2]
The Struve Railroad Bridge, Kyiv's second stationary bridge, was built in 1868–1870 with the construction supervision conducted personally by Amand Struve. [3] This over 1 kilometer long railroad truss bridge was initially named to its constructor, engineer Struve. Standing on 13 piers, over 1 km (0.62 mi) long, the bridge was the longest in Europe at that time. During the construction Struve first in the Russian Empire used caisson method to lay the foundation . On February 17, 1870 the first train by the Kyiv-Kursk railroad company arrived through the bridge to the Kyiv railroad station. Similarly to the Nicholas Bridge, the Struve Bridge survived World War I and the Civil war, but was blown up in 1920 by the retreating Polish troops (see: Kyiv offensive ).
The bridge was built in 1906 and was blown up in 1943 by the retreating forces of Nazi Germany. Rusanivsky bridge connected the Darnytsia region with the city of Kyiv by the Brovary chaussée (highway). The bridge was designed by architect V.Apishkov. In 1965 in its place was erected the Metro Bridge and the Rusanivsky Metropolitan Bridge (extension of the first) which both are part of the Svyatoshyno-Brovary Subway Line (SBL).
New bridges were built in the early Soviet years but were destroyed in the first months of the 1941 Nazi German invasion. Restored by forced labor of war prisoners and civilians during German occupation they were blown up again by Germans when they retreated from Kyiv in November 1943. [4]
Within months after the Polish troops blew up the original chain bridge, that very summer 1920 the Ukrainian engineer Evgeny Paton proposed the reconstruction project that would have reused the old chains to be lifted from under water. However, rusting made the metallic parts of the old bridge unusable and for the following two years Paton worked on several projects of the Nicholas bridge's restoration. He ended up proposing to construct a totally new bridge but this proposal was declined by the supporters of the reusing of the old elements from underwater. The year of 1923 passed in arguing between the two proposals. The construction overseen by Paton was finished by 1925. The Yevheniya Bosch Bridge was named after the former Soviet People's Secretary of Internal Affairs and a fierce Bolshevik, Yevgeniya Bosch. [5]
Following the Nazi attack on the Soviet Union, the bridge was destroyed on September 18, 1941, by retreating Soviet forces. A pontoon bridge was built on its place by forced labour under German occupation, which was destroyed again by German troops retreating from Kyiv.
The replacement Darnytskyi railroad bridge was built in the early 1920s but shared the fate of the Bosch Bridge. Destroyed in the first months of the Great Patriotic War, it was restored during German occupation by forced labor, and was destroyed again by retreating German troops.
During the Battle of Kyiv, Red Army's attempt to catch the bridge by landing forces was unsuccessful. The Germans blew up the bridge under the eyes of the Soviet landing force unit. The landing unit was disbanded for the operation failure.
Immediately after the liberation a temporary wooden bridge was built at the location of the blown up Darnytskyi bridge by the Red Army engineers in the record thirteen-day time (some sources cite thirty days) in the urgency to facilitate the pursuit of the German army on its retreat from Ukraine. The record short construction time plan was met despite the frequent German bombing raids. 50,000 Kyivites took part in the bridge construction.
A few years before World War II the Soviet government planned two underground railroad lines to be laid underneath the bedrock of Dnieper river. One tunnel line (Northern) would have stretched from the Obolon neighborhood (Obolon Raion) and to what is known as Vygurivshchyna (Desna Raion) near Voskresenska Slobidka on the left bank of Dnieper in the close proximity of Troieschyna. Another line (Southern) was planned to cross the Dnieper from the Zhukiv Island to Osokorky (Darnytsia Raion). The project came up in a fear that in case of a war the bridges over the Dnieper were a vulnerable part of the regional transport infrastructure, and tunnels might be a long-term strategic solution.
The construction started in 1936 was planned to be finished sometime in 1944. The NKVD oversaw the project, drafting hundreds of military, civilian and prison workers to work on it. The underdeveloped technology of the time required special makeshift caissons (vertical mines for ventilation and soil extraction) to be built in the middle of the river. Due to technical failures and the start of the war, the construction was never finished or even disclosed to the public. The builders were able only to connect the Right Bank with the close Zhukiv Island (where the present-day southern port is situated). The flooded entrance to the tunnel and abandoned caissons can now be seen in the forests and bays of Holosiivskyi Raion. Contemporary amateur researchers believe that a large secret base component of the project, including a train station, barracks and mass graves of workers, are also located in the depths of the tunnels. [6]
After the start of World War II all tunnel construction (known as the Construction No.1) was suspended and afterwards recognized as unreasonable. Nonetheless, the entrances to the unfinished tunnels still exist around the mentioned neighborhoods, which are mostly unguarded.
The road-only Pivnichnyi Bridge ( 50°29′26″N30°32′09″E / 50.49056°N 30.53583°E ) (until February 2018 the bridge was named Moskovskyi Bridge [7] ), designed by the architect A.V.Dobrovolsky and engineered by G.B.Fux, was built in 1976. It is a cable-stayed bridge, with the beam of the main span being held by a cluster of steel ropes which are fixed to a 115 meters tall A-pylon. [8] The bridge consists of two spans: a 816 m (2,677 ft) long and 31.4 m (103 ft) wide span across the Dnieper and a 732 m (2,402 ft) long, 29.1 m (95 ft) wide span across the Desyonka, a Dnieper tributary.
The northernmost of the city bridges, Pivnichnyi Bridge is a key structure on the northern end of the Kyiv Smaller Ring Road, connecting Pochaina to the densely populated north-eastern residential neighborhoods, mainly Troieschyna. From the moment of its construction the bridge was built as a high-speed motorway, which it remains to this day.
The Rybalskyi Railroad Bridge ( 50°29′01″N30°32′50″E / 50.48361°N 30.54722°E ) is made of steel trusses. It was originally built in 1929 and was known as Petrovskyi Bridge at that time. Like other bridges, it was blown up in the course of World War II, but was not heavily damaged and was reopened in 1944. [9]
The Rybalskyi Railroad Bridge completes the railway circle around Kyiv. However, the bridge is limited to slow-speed rail traffic due to its age.
A steel bridge connects Podil neighborhood to the Rybalskyi Peninsula over the Kyiv Harbor. In the 1990s, the bridge was found unsafe for automobile traffic and since 2001 it was reserved for pedestrians only. The bridge is fenced off from February 2, 2009 and will be dismantled. [10]
The automobile-only Havanskyi ("Harbor") Bridge was opened on 17 December 2007 for automotive traffic from Podil towards Obolon across Havan' (Ukrainian : Гавань) — the harbor in the mouth of the former Pochaina River, with the construction being started in 2003, serving as a substitute for the closed Rybalskyi Bridge. On October 23, 2010 the bridge was opened for two-way traffic together with an adjacent flyover on the right bank. [11]
The Parkovyi Bridge , also known as the Parkovyi Footbridge, designed by architect V. Suvorov and engineered by V. Kiriyenko, was built in 1957. The bridge is a light construction 400 m (1,312 ft) in length that connects Kyiv to the park-area Trukhaniv Island. This is the only bridge constructed specifically for the pedestrian traffic over the Dnieper fairway, and for this reason it's formally included in the number of Kyiv bridges across Dnieper.
The automobile-only Venetian Bridge , designed by architect A. Ilyashenko and engineered by V. Koval, was built in 1966. The bridge spans the Venetian Canal dividing the Venetsiiskyi Island and the Dolobetskyi Island.
The Rusanivka Bridges were built in the 1960s over the Rusanivka Canal, connecting the neighborhood with the rest of Left Bank city. There are 5 bridges, 2 of them are exclusively pedestrian. Prior to World War II Rusanivka has been connected to the rest of Kyiv by a bridge, but it was destroyed during the war. The Rusanivka bridges are a popular place for amateur fishermen.
The auto-and-rail Metro Bridge ( 50°26′35″N30°33′50″E / 50.44306°N 30.56389°E ), engineered by G. Fux and Y. Inosov and built in 1965. The bridge is used for both the Sviatoshynsko-Brovarska Line of Kyiv Metro and automobile traffic (being part of the Brovary Parkway). The Metro bridge consists of two spans as it links the central Hydropark island as well as the left and right banks. The larger span consists of an elevated central Metro span and side automobile spans on separate, lower estacades. Both the Metro and automobile paths have a distinct arched contour. This was because the Metro line continues into the hill of the right bank with the Dnipro station.
The smaller span called Rusanivskyi Bridge which links the Hydropark with the left bank is a more conventional level estacade with two northern traffic lanes and a southern Metro path.
The 1,543 meters long automobile-only Paton Bridge ( 50°25′38″N30°34′55″E / 50.42722°N 30.58194°E ), built in 1953, is the longest of the Dnieper bridges in the city. It was the first fully welded steel construction of such length in the world to the date of completion and it was the longest bridge in Europe at that time. The bridge was named after Evgeny Paton, the famous welding engineer who developed the technology for the structure. He died a few weeks before the construction was completed, never seeing his masterpiece.
Initially carrying the automotive traffic and cross-Dnieper tram lines, the bridge have recently been renovated. The tram rails were removed and the electric trolley bus infrastructure was added to the bridge. Shutting down the tram line that historically served the bridge has met the mixed reception from the Kyivites, despite the municipal authorities claimed that the tram service over the bridge has become impractical.
The bridge currently has 3 traffic lanes in both directions and one reversible lane connecting Pechersk to the Left Bank.
The old Darnytskyi Railroad Bridge ( 50°24′58″N30°35′11″E / 50.41611°N 30.58639°E ), engineered by I. Barenboym and E. Radzevich, was built in 1949. It took the place of an older bridge, which was destroyed in 1941 in the first days of the German invasion of the Soviet Union (see the earlier history section.).
The New Darnytskyi Bridge is an auto-and-rail bridge, constructed 50 m (164 ft) south of the existing Darnytskyi Railroad Bridge. The bridge carries 2 lanes of railroad, and 6 lanes of auto traffic. [12] The bridge's expected capacity is 60,000 vehicles and 120 pairs of trains per day. [13] Already operational as itself, the bridge complex now lacks road connection ramps from some directions which are still under construction. Additional railroad links to match new bridge' capacity are also being constructed. On September 27, 2010 the railroad part of the bridge was officially opened; on March 31, 2011, road traffic opened. [14] As of the last government notice, the bridge was expected to be completed in 2012. [13] Following the construction of the bridge, a new major passenger terminal will be completed in the Darnytsia Railway Station on the Left Bank of the city.
The auto-and-rail Pivdennyi ("Southern") Bridge ( 50°23′41″N30°35′23″E / 50.39472°N 30.58972°E ), designed by the architect A. Gavrilov and engineered by G. Fux, was built in 1990. It is the second metro bridge in Kyiv, serving both the Syretsko-Pecherska metro line and automobile traffic. The shrouds holding the spans on the bridge are supported by a two-column ferroconcrete construction 115 m (377 ft) in height.
The bridge currently has 3 traffic lanes in both directions. It connects the Vydubychi to the rapidly developing left-bank Darnytsia neighborhood, completing the southern end of the Kyiv Smaller Ring Road route.
Due to a large traffic increase since the late 1990s, more bridges are needed to avoid traffic jams on and around already existing bridges.[ citation needed ] Specifically, the central rail route from the central railway terminal via the Darnytskyi Bridge is overloaded, limiting the railroad traffic in Eastern Europe.
Two bridges are currently under construction (one, the New Darnytskyi Bridge, already operational) and one more[ which? ] is planned according to the Kyiv Development Plan. In addition, in 2006 a project was unveiled to provide decorative night illumination to most of the bridges. [15]
The construction of a new 7 km (4 mi) long metro/automobile bridge ( 50°28′18″N30°32′40″E / 50.47167°N 30.54444°E ) is underway on Trukhaniv Ostriv, on the midway between existing Rybalskyi Rail Bridge and Parkovyi Bridge. The bridge is a part of the future Podilsko-Vyhurivska Line, and it will carry 3 lanes of auto traffic in both directions. The construction is contracted by the Kyiv municipality.
Despite the mid-20th century failure, the idea of under-river tunnels, which is relied on much advanced metro technologies, is still on Kyiv city planner's table. Tunnel projects are recently being included in some of proposed Kyiv development plans as a way to move the main traffic flows in the city center underground. However, most experts[ who? ] agree that such projects are both unaffordable and technically infeasible at this time.
Recently, Kyivavtodor road company and the institutes of Kyivdormostproekt and Kyivproekt were working out plans for a tunnel system which would connect the left and right banks of Kyiv. [16] City authorities welcomed the plan, which would ease the traffic congestion of Kyiv's bridges. [16]
In case of war/terrorism emergency, the makeshift pontoon bridges are to be established in the city. A special Pontoon-Bridge Brigade of the Armed Forces is based on the Left Bank, ready to use its truck-based automatic bridges and docking boats. Such equipment allows automobile and limited railroad connection over the river, and is frequently used in military maneuvers.
Picture | Name | Architect | Usage | Length | Opened |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Parkovyi Bridge Парковий міст | Yevhen Paton | Pedestrians | 52 metres (171 ft) | November 22, 1910 | |
Rybalskyi Railway Bridge Рибальський залізничний міст | Yevhen Paton | Railway | 1,430 metres (4,690 ft) | January 1917 | |
Darnytskyi Bridge Дарницький міст | M. Rudenko | Railway | 1,114 metres (3,655 ft) | 1951 | |
Paton Bridge Міст Патона | Yevhen Paton | Automobiles Trams (1953–2004) | 1,543 metres (5,062 ft) | November 5, 1953 | |
Parkovyi Bridge Парковий міст | Aleksei Zavarov | Pedestrians | 427 metres (1,401 ft) | July 3, 1957 | |
Rybalskyi Cable Bridge Рибальський вантовий міст | A. Goldshtein | Automobiles | 474 metres (1,555 ft) | September 23, 1963 | |
Rusanivskyi Bridge Русанівський міст | Automobiles | 100 metres (330 ft) | 1963 | ||
Rusanivskyi Bridge Русанівський міст | Automobiles | 95 metres (312 ft) | 1964 | ||
Rusanivskyi Bridge Русанівський міст | Automobiles | 120 metres (390 ft) | 1964 | ||
Metro Bridge Міст Метро | Georgy Fuks | Automobiles Metro | 682 metres (2,238 ft) | November 5, 1965 | |
Rusanivskyi Metro Bridge Русанівський метроміст | Georgy Fuks | Automobiles Metro | 349 metres (1,145 ft) | November 5, 1965 | |
Venetsiiskyi Bridge Венеційський міст | Oleg Iliashenko | Pedestrians | 144 metres (472 ft) | 1966 | |
Rusanivskyi Footbridge Русанівський міст | Pedestrians | 100 metres (330 ft) | 1967 | ||
Rusanivskyi Footbridge Русанівський міст | Pedestrians | 110 metres (360 ft) | 1967 | ||
Pivnichnyi Bridge Північний міст | Mikhail Krasnoshtein | Automobiles | 816 metres (2,677 ft) | December 3, 1976 | |
Pivdennyi Bridge Південний міст | Georgy Fuks | Automobiles Metro | 1,256 metres (4,121 ft) | December 25, 1990 | |
Heavenly Hundred Bridge Міст Небесної сотні | Pedestrians | 45 metres (148 ft) | 2002 | ||
Havanskyi Bridge Гаванський міст | Yuriy Borodkin | Automobiles | 380 metres (1,250 ft) | December 17, 2007 October 23, 2010 | |
Kirpa Darnytskyi Bridge Дарницький міст Кірпи | Oleg Zavarzin | Automobiles Railway | 1,100 metres (3,600 ft) | September 27, 2010 July 6, 2023 | |
Glass Bridge Скляний міст | Andriy Myrhorodskyi | Pedestrians | 216 metres (709 ft) | May 25, 2019 | |
Podilskyi Bridge Подільський міст | Georgy Fuks | Automobiles Metro | 4,432 metres (14,541 ft) | December 1, 2023 | |
Bridge to Obolonskyi Island Міст на Оболонський острів | Automobiles | 61 metres (200 ft) | 2023 | ||
Wave of Azov Хвиля Азову | Pedestrians | 164 metres (538 ft) | May 24, 2024 |
Picture | Name | Architect | Usage | Length | Opened | Destroyed |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Mykolaivskyi Chain Bridge Миколаївський ланцюговий міст | Charles Vignoles | Pedestrians Trams | 776 metres (2,546 ft) | October 10, 1853 | June 10, 1920 | |
Darnytskyi Railroad Bridge Дарницький залізничний міст | Amand Struve | Railway | 1,067 metres (3,501 ft) | February 25, 1870 | November 1943 | |
Rusanivskyi Bridge Русанівський міст | Vladimir Apyshkov | Pedestrians Trams | 202 metres (663 ft) | October 24, 1906 | September 19, 1941 | |
Yevheniya Bosh Bridge Міст Євгенії Бош | Yevhen Paton | Automobiles | 776 metres (2,546 ft) | May 10, 1925 | September 19, 1941 | |
Navodnytskyi Bridge Наводницький міст | Konstantin Yakovlev | Automobiles | 1,780 metres (5,840 ft) | 1941 | 1953 |
The Kyiv Metro is a rapid transit system in Kyiv owned by the Kyiv City Council and operated by the city-owned company Kyivskyi Metropoliten. It was initially opened on November 6, 1960, as a single 5.24 km (3.26 mi) line with five stations. It was the first rapid transit system in Ukraine.
The Sviatoshynsko–Brovarska line is the first line of the Kyiv Metro, dating back to 1960. It includes some of the system's more historically significant stations, such as Arsenalna, which at 105.5 meters is the deepest in the world and the next station Dnipro, which although the tunnel follows a descent, appears above ground level.
Subdivisions of Kyiv, the capital of Ukraine, include the formal administrative subdivision into urban districts (raions) and the more detailed informal subdivision into historical neighborhoods. Kyiv is divided in two halves split by Dnieper, therefore there exist two important parts "left-bank Kyiv" which is the newer addition and "right-bank Kyiv" in reference to the Dnieper, which is the original Kyiv city.
Dnipro is a station on the Kyiv Metro's Sviatoshynsko-Brovarska Line. Named after the Dnieper River, the station consists of a semi-estacade over the embankment highway, and then continues across the river as part of Kyiv Metro Bridge. The station was opened along with the first stage of the Metro in 1960 and for the first five years, before the bridge was completed, was the eastern terminus of the line. The station was closed from 24 February 2022 to 8 March 2024 due to the Russian invasion of Ukraine.
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Darnytsia is the largest Ukrainian Railways station of the Ukrainian capital Kyiv, located in the city's Left-bank Darnytsia neighborhood.
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The Nicholas Chain Bridge was a chain bridge over the Dnieper that existed from 1855 to 1920 in Kyiv.
Southwestern Railways (PZZ), headquartered in Kyiv, the capital of Ukraine, is a component part of the Ukrzaliznytsia company, its regional branch.
The Struve Railroad Bridge, was the first all-metal railroad bridge over the Dnieper that existed from 1855 to 1920 in Kyiv. The bridge was one of the longest in the empire, yielding in length only to the bridges in Syzran and Yekaterinoslav.
Paton Bridge is one of the bridges across the Dnipro in Kyiv, Ukraine named after its constructor Evgeny Paton. Built between 1941 and 1953, it is one of the world's first all-welded bridge and is also the longest bridge in Kyiv having a length of 1,543 metres (5,062 ft). Traffic across the bridge was opened on 5 November 1953. The bridge also acts as a segment of the Lesser Ring Road of Kyiv.
The Metro Bridge is the first metro bridge, part of the Brovarsky prospect spanning across the Dnieper River in Kyiv, the capital of Ukraine. It was engineered by G. Fuks and Y. Inosov and constructed in 1965 with the expansion of the Kyiv Metro system. The bridge is used for both the Sviatoshynsko-Brovarska Line of the metro and for automobile traffic.
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The New Darnytskyi Bridge is a combined road and railroad bridge in Kyiv, the capital of Ukraine. It spans across the Dnieper River connecting the left and right banks of the city, the Darnytsia and Holosiiv districts of Kyiv, respectively. The bridge carries a double track rail line and is built to accommodate six lanes of road traffic.
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The Podilskyi Bridge Crossing, also known as Podilsko-Voskresenskyi Bridge, is a combined road-rail bridge over the Dnipro River under construction in Kyiv, Ukraine. It is a focal point of construction of the Podilsko-Vyhurivska Line of the Kyiv Metro. A part of the bridge was opened with restrictions on 1 December 2023.
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