Chroy Changvar Bridge Explained

The Chroy Changva Bridge (also known as the Cambodian-Japanese Kizuna Friendship Bridge) is a 709-meter bridge that crosses the TonlĂ© Sap River in Phnom Penh, originally built in 1963, with Japanese aid. Severely damaged during the civil war in 1972 and 1973, it remained closed until it reopened on 26 February 1994[1] About 10 km north of it there is another bridge the Prek Kdam Bridge, then the Prek Pnov Bridge and no more bridges on the Tonle Sap, a temporary bridge should open in April 2018, the construction of a concrete bridge should start just after that.[2]

1972 attack

On 24 March 1972 People's Army of Vietnam/Khmer Rouge Sappers blew up an explosive-packed vehicle on the bridge, collapsing several spans into the Mekong River and killing three civilians.[3]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Chroy Changvar Bridge, Attraction in Phnom Penh | Tourism Cambodia.
  2. Web site: Iron bridge crossing Tonle Sap 60 percent complete . 2018-04-11 . https://web.archive.org/web/20180411174810/http://www.construction-property.com/read-news-1013 . 2018-04-11 . dead .
  3. News: The New York Times. Enemy blows up span of main bridge in Pnompenh. 24 March 1972. 3.