citynoise.org
What is Citynoise?..... Today's posts..... This month..... Recent Comments..... Contact..... Post your own Citynoise.....
http://www.citynoise.org  

browse by city

New York, NY (721)
Toronto, ON (720)
Brooklyn, NY (713)
Montreal, QC (376)
London, UK (286)
complete city list

popular articles

Ditmas Park
from: Peter
Coast
from: Peter
Shad Crossing
from: Peter
South Philly May 4th: Art, Indicators, People, Etc.
from: serlingrod
Is America a Hotel
from: joey
what's hot this month?

recent articles

Kitten and Roosters
from: lunapark
Destruction or Art
from: Robert Emanuel
Saturday Afternoon, Bushwick
from: Peter
Bushwick Houses
from: Peter
May 09 2008 Berlin
from: hool
FooMunda The Bridge
from: JoeyD
Bushwick Remembered Photo Collective
from: upfromflames
I Could'nt Think of a Title for This Because a Pictures Is Worth a Thousand Words.
from: jack
The Shady Lady of Notre - Dame St. West
from: Montrealbunny
Understanding the Mungiki
from: mnguru
read all today's articles

browse by author

Peter (740)
joey (262)
EvilGentleman (261)
hool (243)
jack (218)
complete author list

hot topics

graffiti
Justo Gallego
JA One
graf trux
parkour
fuck neck face
wheat paste
nyc
sane smith
graf
sixy
hool
harlem
banksy
brooklyn

Brooklyn Bridge and World Trade Center

- WallyG - Thursday, August 23rd, 2007 : goo

[previous] :: [next]

image 23043

image 23044

In 2007, The was ranked #19 on the AIA 150 America's Favorite Architecture list. The was ranked #20.

The Bridge (originally the and Brooklyn Bridge) stretches 5,989 feet (1825 m) over the (main span of 1,595 feet 6 inches) connecting and . On completion, it was the largest suspension in the world--fifty percent longer than any previously built, and the first steel-wire suspension bridge. For several years, the towers were also the tallest structures in the Western Hemipshere.

Designed by an engineering firm owned by John Augustus Roebling, the bridge is built from limestone, granite, and Rosendale natural cement in Gothic style, with characteristic pointed arches above the passageways through the stone towers. Roebling and his firm had built smaller suspension bridges, such as the John A. Roebling Suspension Bridge in , and the Waco Suspension Bridge in , , that served as prototypes for the final design.

Construction began on January 3, 1870 and the bridge was opened on May 24, 1883. On that first day, a total of 1,800 vehicles and 150,300 people crossed. The bridge cost $15.1 million to build and approximately 27 people died during its construction, including Roebling. As construction was beginning, Roebling's foot was injured by a ferry when it crashed into a wharf; within a few weeks, he died of tetanus caused by the amputation of his toes. His son, Washington, succeeded him, but was stricken with caisson disease (decompression sickness, commonly known as 'the bends'), from working in compressed air in caissons, in 1872. His wife, Emily Warren Roebling, became his aide, learning engineering and communicating his wishes to the on-site assistants. A week after the opening, on May 30, a rumor that the Bridge was going to collapse caused a stampede which crushed 12 people.

Bridges were not tested in wind tunnels until the 1950s. Roebling therefore designed the open truss structure supporting the deck to be six times as strong as he guessed it needed to be. A substitution of inferior qualify wire in the cabling, though, left the bridge just four times stronger, though. Either way, Roebling's design has held up in all conditions over the years.

At various times, the bridge has carried horses, (until 1944) and s (until 1950), it currently has 6 lanes for motor vehicles, with a separate walkway along the centerline for s.

This article has been viewed 1132 times in the last 22 months


jack: 23rd Aug 2007 - 22:34 GMT

thank you wally, my great-grandfather was one of the workers on that bridge and he also worked on the battery tunnel, roebling has a town named after him, roebling new jersey where his wire factory was set up and still is there. perhaps someone could take a ride down route 130 and go to roebling. many an evening i would cross the brooklyn bridge and see the twin towers lit up with workers in their offices as i listened to radio 1130 the 'milkman's matinee', it was a time when i was working and riding to the city as usual every evening, then for dinner at 4am i would go to the west street diner for great food with friends and back to the wtc to go back to work until 8am.

Comment on this article

Name:

Type your comment here: Upload photos (opens in popup window)

(Please be patient, this can take several seconds. We're working on speeding it up!)

[previous] :: [next]

search citynoise.org

recent discussions

Kitten and Roosters
from: lunapark
Airplanes
from: vz
America's Most Boring Towns: 10
from: Scott Sargent
Kingston Penitentiary
from: EvilGentleman
These Things No Longer Exist
from: Andrew Smith
Walking Home
from: Elicar
Crime in Oslo
from: Rune-Willem
Cabrini Green [whats Left of It]
from: corsakti
METRO GRAFFITI ART SINCE 1988.
from: Metro 1
Yorkville: A Neighborhood Recalled
from: Laura

from the archives

Osaka Part Two


Osaka Part Two

recently viewed

Brooklyn Bridge and World Trade Center
from: WallyG
I Thought I Said Hold the Spit
from: EvilGentleman
Frites Dorées
from: serlingrod
My_Time_Is_Yours
from: ram51@japan.com
Food on a Stick
from: Tyfoid Kid
Charing Cross Bridge
from: Steelisreal
Tour De La Bourse
from: Cinic
Palace of the Gay Prince and Yours Emotionally
from: Howard
Sax Man II
from: JoeyD
Houston At Night
from: groovehouse