Birecik Bridge

Birecik Bridge
Birecik Köprüsü
Birecik bridge
Coordinates 37°00′48″N 37°34′57″E / 37.0134°N 37.5826°E / 37.0134; 37.5826Coordinates: 37°00′48″N 37°34′57″E / 37.0134°N 37.5826°E / 37.0134; 37.5826
Carries 2 lanes of D.400
Crosses Euphrates
Locale Birecik
Named for Town of Birecik
Owner General Directorate of Highways
Characteristics
Material Reinforced concrete
Total length 695 m (2,280 ft)
Width 11 m (36 ft)
No. of spans 5
History
Constructed by Amaç Ticaret Türk A.Ş.
Construction start 18 August 1951
Construction end March 1956 (March 1956)
Birecik Bridge
Location in Turkey

The Birecik Bridge is a 695 m (2,280 ft) long deck arch bridge carrying the D.400 across the Euphrates in Birecik, Turkey.

Geography

The bridge is on the state highway D-400 , which runs from southwest to southeast Turkey. It spans over Fırat River (Euphrates) at about 37°02′N 37°58′E / 37.033°N 37.967°E / 37.033; 37.967. The river marks the boundary between Nizip district of Gaziantep Province and Birecik district of Şanlıurfa Province. Birecik is just at the east of the bridge and Nizip is 16 km (9.9 mi) to the west.

Project and construction

Up to 1956, travel between Gaziantep and Şanlıurfa was difficult, for all vehicles had to transfer to primitive ferries over the Fırat River. The bridge project was one of the major projects of Turkey in the 1950s. The awarded company was Amaç Ticaret Türk AŞ. The governmental inspection was carried out by the General Directorate of Highways.[1] The construction began in August 1951 and the bridge was completed in March 1956.

Details

The length of the bridge is 695 m (2,280 ft) and it is 11 m (36 ft) wide with1 m (3.3 ft) on each side reserved for pedestrians. There are five arches over the river [2] and fourteen sections over the land.[3] At the time of its completion, it was the third longest bridge in Turkey, after the Karkamış Bridge and Uzunköprü Bridge.[4]

One of the Turkey's top 50 civil engineering projects

Turkish Chamber of Civil Engineers lists Birecik Bridge as one of the fifty civil engineering feats in Turkey, a list of remarkable engineering projects realized in the first 50 years of the chamber.[5]

References

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