Libeň Bridge

Coordinates: 50°06′11.99″N 14°27′36.47″E / 50.1033306°N 14.4601306°E / 50.1033306; 14.4601306

Libeň Bridge in Prague

The Libeň Bridge (Czech: Libeňský most) is a bridge in Prague over the river Vltava. It connects the city quarter Holešovice on the left side with the city quarter Libeň on the right side of the river. It is the fifteenth bridge way down the river and there is a tram line on its roadway.

Architecture

Skyline of the bridge

The Libeň Bridge is 370 metres long but it has 780 metres together with the ramp on the side of Holešovice. With its 780 metres, it is the longest bridge in Prague.[1] Its wide is 21 metres and the tram line is a part of the bridge since its opening. The bridge was slightly damaged by the flood in the year 2002.

The concrete bridge was designed by architects Pavel Janák and František Mencl in the Cubist style. It has five arches with the spans between 28 and 43 metres. It has replaced the temporary wooden bridge which stood on its place since the year 1903. The Libeň Bridge was open for the public on April 29, 1928 to the tenth anniversary of the existence of Czechoslovakia.

Names of the bridge

1928-1939: Masaryk Bridge (Masarykův most), in honor of Tomáš Garrigue Masaryk, the first President of Czechoslovakia
1939-1940: Baxa Bridge (Baxův most), in honor of Karel Baxa, the mayor of Prague in the years 1919-1937
1940-1945: Libeň Bridge (Libeňský most), according to the nearest city quarter Libeň
1945-1952: Baxa Bridge
1952-1962: Stalingrad Bridge (Stalingradský most), according to the city of Stalingrad (Volgograd today)
since 1962: Libeň Bridge

Photogalery

References

  1. "Libeňský most" (in Czech). Retrieved 7 December 2014.
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