Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective

Al Garhoud Bridge

Bridge in Dubai, the United Arab Emirates From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Al Garhoud Bridge
Remove ads

Al Garhoud Bridge (Arabic: جِسْر ٱلْقَرْهُوْد, romanized: Jisr Al-Qarhūd) is one of three road bridges over Dubai Creek, and one of five crossings, in Dubai, the U.A.E. The bridge forms the eastern end of the road toll of Salik Road Toll that went into effect on 1 July 2007. Since the beginning of Salik, the bridge has seen low amounts of traffic for Dubai.

Quick Facts Al Garhoud Bridge جِسْر ٱلْقَرْهُوْد, Coordinates ...
Remove ads

Old bridge

Opened in 1976, the old bridge was the second bridge constructed that crossed the Creek, after Al Maktoum Bridge. In 2007, nearly 9,000 vehicles crossed the bridge every hour at peak flow.[1] It has been the cause of huge traffic jams in Dubai. The main reason for this was the number of roads that fed into the bridge. On the lanes bound for Bur Dubai, seven lanes (from three different roads) converged into three lanes.[2] For the Deira-bound lanes, five lanes converged into three lanes.[2] Also, the bridge had to be closed to allow large boats to pass under it.[3] The bridge had a total of 6 lanes: 3 lanes in each direction.

Remove ads

New bridge

Summarize
Perspective
Thumb
New bridge under construction by BESIX (progress photo taken on 1 May 2007)

To solve the major traffic problems caused by the old bridge, a replacement was constructed between 2006 and 2008 by Belgian main contractor BESIX.[4] The bridge, which cost 415 million dirhams,[2] is meant to add more lanes of road that cross Dubai Creek. The new Al Garhoud Bridge has a total of 14 lanes, 7 in each direction.[2] It is able to handle 16,000 vehicles per hour.[2] Construction of the bridge began in February 2006 and by 26 September 2007, 76% of the construction was completed.[2] The bridge is 520 m (1,706 ft) long and 16 m (52.5 ft) above the water.[2] On 15 December 2007, four lanes on the Deira-bound side were opened to vehicle traffic.[5] Then on 15 March 2008, as had been scheduled,[2] remaining lanes on both sides were opened.[6] The old bridge was demolished after the new bridge opened.[3][5] Shortly after the bridge opened, the Roads and Transport Authority announced that Al Garhoud Bridge would be decorated with artwork that look like sand dunes during the day and waves at night with the aid of lighting.[7]

Construction Photos on 31 January 2007

Construction Photos on 1 May 2007

Construction Photo on 31 May 2007

Construction Photo on 18 October 2007

Remove ads

See also

References

Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.

Remove ads