- Vivekananda Setu
Vivekananda Setu (Old name Willingdon Bridge)(also known as Bally Bridge) is a
bridge over theHooghly River inWest Bengal ,India . It links the city ofHowrah , at Bally, to its twin city ofKolkata , atDakshineswar . Built in December 1932, it is a multispan steel bridge and was built to provide road cum rail link between the Calcutta Port and its hinterland.The bridge serves both road and rail:
*Rail - connectsSealdah Station toDelhi
*Road - connectsGrand Trunk Road (Howrah side) to Barrackpore Trunk Road (Kolkata side)The famous Dakshineswar Temple is situated on the banks of the Hooghly river near the Bally Bridge. The bridge also has sister bridges over the river at different points, namely the
Howrah Bridge (Rabindra Setu) and theVidyasagar Setu .This bridge currently handles a daily traffic of 24,000 vehicles "(per data released by National Highway section of PWD)". This bridge handles the maximum number of goods vehicles coming into the city via the National Highways 2 and 6 of India.
Second Vivekananda Bridge
The existing
Vivekananda Bridge is officially declared as weak and damaged. To divide its load,Government of West Bengal , in 1993, had mooted the idea of the fourth Hooghly Bridge - a second bridge is being built along the existing one, about 50 m downstream of the existing bridge. However, unlike the existing bridge, the carry only road traffic, and is a part of the famousGolden Quadrilateral project ofIndia .The government is visions the bridge not only a "marvel of architecture", but also is the only high-speed route into the
Kolkata from its northern borders. This "wonder of an architecture" bridge is even more beautiful than theVidyasagar Setu and is estimated to cost approximately Rs. 6,500million . The construction of the bridge started on April 2004, by the construction giant [http://www.larsentoubro.com/ Larsen and Toubro] and is expected to be completed in a record time by March 2007 and is open to traffic now.The bridge is the India's first multi-span, single-plane cable supported extra-dosed bridge; with short pylons and seven continuous spans of 110 m, totaling a length of 880 m (2,887 feet). It is 29 m wide and will be able to support 6 lanes of traffic, amounting to 40,000 vehicles per day "(the facility is expected to reach its saturation level within 22 years of commissioning"). The cable stay profile of the new bridge would match with the profile of the existing bridge; the bridge has been constructed with short pylons that are perfectly in tune with the nearby Dakshineshwar
Temple and do not dwarf the pilgrimage spot with its towering structure
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.