Qasr El Nil Bridge Explained

Bridge Name:Qasr El Nil
Native Name:Asr El Nil
Native Name Lang:Asr El Nil
Carries:Tahrir Street[1]
Crosses:Nile River
Designer:Ralph Anthony Freeman
Engineering:Dorman, Long and Co. Ltd.
Design:swing bridge, arch
Material:steel
Length:1 932 m
Spans:7
Begin:1931
Complete:1933
Open:June 6, 1933
Replaces:El Gezira Bridge (1872)
Coordinates:30.0437°N 31.2295°W

The Qasr el Nil Bridge (originally named Khedive Ismail Bridge, Egyptian Arabic: Asr el Nil Bridge), is a historic swing bridge structure dating from 1931 which replaced the first bridge to span the Nile River in central Cairo, Egypt.[2] It connects Tahrir Square in Downtown Cairo on the east bank of the river, to the southern end of Gezira/Zamalek Island. At the bridge's east and west approaches are four large bronze lion statues; they are late 19th-century works by Henri Alfred Jacquemart, French sculptor and animalier.

Route

Qasr El Nil Street crosses over the Nile on the bridge, from the east bank area Tahrir Square—Liberation Square in downtown Cairo, past the huge Mogamma government building and the headquarters of the Arab League, then onto the Qasr El Nil Bridge over the river to Gezira Island. There it meets Opera Square and the Cairo Opera House, with connections north to the Cairo Tower and the Zamalek district, and south across the island to the Tahrir Bridge across a smaller branch of the Nile to Tahrir Street in the Agouza district on the west bank.

Construction and name

The previous bridge on the site, El Gezira Bridge, was a swing bridge built between 1869 and 1871 by Linant de Bellefonds with the participation of France's Five-Lilles Company.[3]

The foundation stone for the present Qasr El Nil Bridge was laid by King Fuad I on February 4, 1931. It was also a swing bridge, though almost double as wide as the original, and after over two years of construction, undertaken by Dorman Long & Co. Ltd, King Fuad inaugurated the bridge's opening on June 6, 1933.

The bridge was originally named Khedive Ismail Bridge after King Fuad's father, Khedive Isma'il Pasha. After the Egyptian Revolution of 1952, the bridge was renamed, along with other Egyptian buildings and bridges. This bridge was renamed Qasr El Nil in Arabic, which translates to Palace of the Nile.[4]

Public use and demonstrations

The Qasr El Nil Bridge is popular for strolling in the evenings.

2011 Egyptian Revolution

See main article: 2011 Egyptian Revolution. The bridge, along with the nearby 6th October Bridge, was a regular site in the 2011 Egyptian revolution for public demonstrations and as a major route east to protest gatherings in Tahrir Square.[5]

Notes and References

  1. http://en.structurae.info/structures/data/index.cfm?id=s0005875 Kasr el Nil Bridge - Structurae
  2. Stephen . F W . 1935-01-01 . The new khedive ismail bridge, cairo, egypt. . Minutes of the Proceedings of the Institution of Civil Engineers . 240 . 1935 . 365–393 . 10.1680/imotp.1935.15246.
  3. Web site: Rafaat . Samir . April 29, 1995 . A BRIDGE MISUNDERSTOOD . 2023-04-12 . www.egy.com.
  4. News: Cairo's bridge of dreams . Fleishman, Jeffrey . August 14, 2007 . Los Angeles Times.
  5. BBC News: "Egypt protests: curfew defied in Cairo and other cities" 29 January 2011. accessed 2011.01.29.