Liberty Bridge, Novi Sad

Liberty Bridge (Serbian: Мост слободе, romanized: Most slobode) is a cable-stayed bridge on the Danube river in Novi Sad, Vojvodina, Serbia. The bridge was opened for traffic on 23 October 1981. During that time, the bridge was the world record holder in the category of bridges with cable-stayed design. It was destroyed during NATO bombardment on 3 April 1999. It was rebuilt from 2003 to 2005 and reopened on 7 October 2005.

Liberty Bridge

Мост слободе
Most slobode
Liberty Bridge: A view from Štrand
Coordinates45°13′58″N 19°50′56″E
Carries6 lane car traffic, 2 bicycle and pedestrian walkways
CrossesDanube
LocaleNovi Sad, Vojvodina, Serbia
Official nameLiberty Bridge
Preceded byIlok–Bačka Palanka Bridge
Followed byVaradin Bridge
Characteristics
DesignCable-stayed bridge, harp design, single arrangement, cable-stayed cradle-system
MaterialSteel rope, concrete Pylons
Total length1,312 m
Width27.60 m
Longest span351 m
History
DesignerNikola Hajdin
Engineering design byGojko Nenadović
Predrag Želalić
Construction start2 September 1976 (1976-09-02) (Old bridge)
2003 (New bridge)
Construction end1981 (Old bridge)
2005 (New bridge)
Opened23 October 1981 (1981-10-23) (Initial opening)
7 October 2005 (2005-10-07) (Reopening)
Collapsed3 April 1999
Location

Name

The name Liberty Bridge was given during the first opening of the bridge on 23 October 1981 as it was opened during the 37th anniversary of the liberation of Novi Sad in World War II.[1]

Location

Liberty Bridge is the most upstream Novi Sad bridge over the Danube river within the urban area. It connects the Bačka and Srem sides of the City of Novi Sad, specifically Novi Sad and Sremska Kamenica. It connects Novi Sad with State Road 21, which goes through Fruška Gora to Ruma, A3 motorway, and western Serbia.

History

Urban Planning

The strong economic development of Novi Sad during the 1960s and 1970s created the conditions for the city to gradually expand to the Srem side (the area of Mišeluk and further up the slopes of Fruška gora). This required the city authorities, and above all the city planners, to start creating framework urban conditions for building a bridge and relieving traffic from the city centre.[1]

The first such conditions were created by the Novi Sad Urban Institute in 1970. The Novi Sad Municipal Assembly decides on the construction of the bridge in December 1973. The architects of the bridge were academics Nikola Hajdin, Gojko Nenadić and Predrag Želalić.[1]

NATO Bombing of Novi Sad

Liberty Bridge destroyed, 1999

On 3 April 1999, at 7:55 pm local time, a rocket struck the Liberty Bridge during the NATO bombing campaign against Yugoslavia.[2] Although the bridge gradually collapsed into the Danube River, there were no deaths thanks to a local fisherman named Velimir Teodorović who rescued nine civilians from the destroyed bridge.[3][1]

Construction

First Construction

Work began on 22 September 1976, when the first pier on the left bank of the Danube was stabbed. During the construction, the attention of the experts was focused on three details: The construction of the bars for pillar 17, where there were traces of land slides; the assembly of the steel structure, in pieces, weighing 200 tonnes, without scaffolding, with the help of the Derrick cranes; and the assembly of the steel ropes, which was original.[1]

Everything was done perfectly, with a deviation of only 13 millimetres, between two parts of the structure, when the last central construction of the bridge was put in place.[1]

The bridge was inaugurated for traffic on 23 October 1981, with the presence of tens of thousands of citizens.[1]

Rebuilding

Rebuilding the bridge cost the city of Novi Sad 40 million euros and lasted for 2 years and 22 days. Maja Gojković, at the time mayor of Novi Sad, reopened it on 7 October 2005. The official reopening was held a few days later, with officials from the European Agency for Reconstruction present.[1]

Controversies

The bridge's reconstruction and opening was a cause for political clashes; one side saying Novi Sad and its citizens should be thankful to EU for the gift of the reconstructed bridge, and the other that EU was obliged to reconstruct it anyway, as a part of war damages compensation.

See also

References

  1. "Istorija kroz konstrukciju Kako je Most slobode postao jedan od simbola Novog Sada". srbijadanas.com (in Serbian). 16 October 2017. Retrieved 20 August 2022.
  2. Spasoje Smiljanić. Novosti: Ubijeni prvo mostovi (in Serbian). 7 March 2009. Accessed 15 June 2017.
  3. L. Preradović (April 10, 2017). "Novosti: Šetalištu ime heroja sa Dunava" (in Serbian). Retrieved July 15, 2017.

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.