Ağın Bridge | |
Native Name: | Ağın Köprüsü |
Native Name Lang: | tr |
Also Known As: | Ağın (Karamağara) Bridge |
Locale: | Ağın, Elazığ Province |
Design: | Cable-stayed bridge |
Builder: | MEGA YAPI |
Material: | Steel |
Mainspan: | 280m (920feet) |
Length: | 520m (1,710feet) |
Width: | 13m (43feet) |
Clearance: | 55m (180feet) |
Begin: | 2001 |
Open: | October 26, 2015 |
Cost: | 33.325 million |
Coordinates: | 38.9155°N 38.663°W |
The Ağın Bridge, Ağın (Karamağara) Bridge, (Turkish: Ağın Köprüsü or Ağın Karamağara Köprüsü) is a cable-stayed bridge spanning Lake Keban in Elazığ Province, Turkey. It was opened to traffic in 2015.
The construction of the bridge began in 2001. Due to alterations to the project, construction was delayed, but work resumed on January 10, 2012, and the opening took place on October 26, 2015. The bridge was built by the Mega Yapi company and the consultant was BOTEK Bosphorus Technical Consulting Corporation.
The cable-stayed bridge is 520m (1,710feet) long and 13m (43feet) wide with a main span of 280m (920feet),[1] and a clearance of 55m (180feet) above the water level. The bridge carries one lane of traffic in each direction. At its opening, the Ağın Bridge became Turkey's fourth longest one after the Bosphorus Bridge, 1560m (5,120feet), and Fatih Sultan Mehmet Bridge, 1510m (4,950feet), in Istanbul and the Nissibi Euphrates Bridge, 610m (2,000feet), in Adıyaman Province. The budgeted cost of the construction was given as 33.325 million.[1]
In the past, access to the town of Ağın from the city of Elazığ was provided by the Karamağara Bridge, an ancient Roman arch bridge situated about 10km (10miles) from the town. The historic bridge was dismantled, and its ashlar masonry was moved to the Elazığ Museum before the Keban Dam was completed and its reservoir created in 1974. For a period of about 40 years following the establishment of the reservoir, the town was disconnected from the provincial center, and was accessible only by ferry boats across the lake. The newly built bridge is also named the "Ağın (Karamağara) Bridge" in remembrance of the previous Roman bridge which no longer exists.