Zero Bridge | |
---|---|
Coordinates | 34°4′11.23″N74°49′48″E / 34.0697861°N 74.83000°E |
Carries | Pedestrian pathway |
Crosses | Jhelum |
Locale | Srinagar, Jammu and Kashmir, India |
Followed by | Abdullah Bridge |
Characteristics | |
Design | Wooden Arch Bridge |
Material | Wood |
Total length | 160 metres (520 ft) |
Width | 9 metres (30 ft) |
History | |
Opened | 1950s |
Closed | Late 1980s (vehicular traffic) |
Location | |
The Zero Bridge is a wooden arch bridge located in the city of Srinagar in the Indian union territory of Jammu and Kashmir. It crosses the Jhelum river in a roughly North-South direction connecting Sonwar in the north to Rajbagh in the South. Originally constructed in the late 1950s under the then chief minister Bakshi Ghulam Mohammad, the bridge was closed for vehicular traffic in the late 1980s owing to the weakening of its wooden structure. [1] [2]
Officially it is said to have been named Zero Bridge since traditionally the Amira Kadal bridge was regarded as the first bridge on the Jhelum as it entered Srinagar and the Zero bridge preceded this 'first' bridge. [2]
The Zero Bridge is still the first bridge downstream of the Jhelum while entering the Srinagar city and the next upstream crossing is located near Pantha Chowk in the city outskirts. At present, the old wooden structure of the bridge is being replaced by a new one, preserving the original architecture and the bridge would continue to be a pedestrian crossing and a heritage site. [2] The vehicular traffic is currently handled by the Abdullah Bridge, located roughly 200 metres downstream.
The Captain Cook Bridge is a road bridge that carries the Pacific Motorway across the Brisbane River in Brisbane, in the state of Queensland, Australia. It was built exclusively for vehicular traffic and was completed in late 1972. The bridge had its naming ceremony on 13 December 1972, with it opening in January/February 1973. A once only pedestrian walk event across the bridge happened shortly before it was opened to vehicular traffic on 21 January 1973, organised by the Rotary Club of Stones Corner. The bridge crosses at the South Brisbane Reach of the river, linking Gardens Point in the Brisbane central business district on the north side to Kangaroo Point and South Brisbane on the southside.
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