Sågbro bridge (Espoon manor bridge II) is a stone bridge in Espoo, Espoonkartano district.
It is thought to have been completed between 1778 and 1816.[1] The bridge is a typical 1770s stone vault bridge, and it is considered to be one the oldest of Finnish stone bridges. It was built in the dry stone technique, meaning that the stones were fitted in place without the use of the mortar.[2] The length of the bridge is 17.2 meters, its total width 6.9 meters, with a useful width of 5.6 meters. The vault opening is 2.7 meters wide, and the bridge's "underpass height" is 1.3 meters.[3]
The bridge was build to replace previously existing wooden bridge on the King's Road which existed already in the 14th century and has been moved to its current location by 1556, when the King's Manor of Espoo was founded.
The Sågbro bridge was taken under museum protection in 1982.[4] The environment of Espoo Manor is included by the Finnish Heritage Agency in the list of Nationally Significant Cultural Environments (RKY).[5]
The Sågbro bridge is not to be mixed with the adjacent Espoo Manor Qvarnbro bridge. The Mankinjoki River divides into two streams at the Kartanonkoski rapids here at Espoo Manor. The Sågbro bridge is over the western stream. Several sawmills have been built on it,[6] the most recent of which remained until the early 20th century.[7]