Tienditas Bridge

Tienditas International Bridge (Spanish: Puente Internacional Tienditas) is a vehicular and pedestrian bridge connecting Táchira, Venezuela with Norte de Santander, Colombia.

Tienditas International Bridge
Tienditas Bridge
Coordinates7.876726°N 72.452541°W / 7.876726; -72.452541
Carries6 divided lanes and pedestrians
CrossesTáchira River
LocaleTáchira, VenezuelaNorte de Santander, Colombia
Official namePuente Internacional Tienditas
History
Construction startJanuary 24, 2014
Construction endFebruary 2016
OpenedNot open
Statistics
Daily traffic0 vehicles per day
Location

History

The bridge's construction began on January 24, 2014[1] and was planned to take no longer than 20 months. The costs were estimated around $32,000,000 and was split equally between the Venezuelan and Colombian governments.

It is the fifth international bridge between the two countries. The bridge itself actually consists of three approximately 280-metre parallel bridges built over the Táchira River, two bridges with three lanes in each direction and a pedestrian bridge. Immigration and customs facilities are located on each side of the bridge.

The crossing was completed in February 2016, but due to tensions between Colombia and Venezuela since 2015 regarding smuggling, the bridge has not been opened to traffic.[2][3]

Venezuela Aid Live

On February 22, 2019, a benefit concert was held on the Colombian side of the bridge to raise awareness and money towards humanitarian aid for Venezuela[4] and to pressure for the reopening of the border so humanitarian aid could enter Venezuela.[5] The Venezuelan government announced that it would also hold a concert on its side of the bridge, but it was later moved to a different location.

References

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