- Source: Kuokkala Bridge
Kuokkala Bridge (Finnish: Kuokkalan silta) is a bridge in Jyväskylä, Finland over the lake Jyväsjärvi. When the city of Jyväskylä expanded into Kuokkala, the eastern part of the town, it was deemed necessary to link the city centre to the new neighbourhood through a new bridge.
During the summer of 1977, three main options were considered: a continuation at the bottom of Vaasankatu to Kylmänoro, and two different paths from the southernmost edge of Lutakko, to Ainola and Peltoniemi. The last of these options was chosen on 26 September 1977 by the city council. The design work started in 1979, the main concern being the muddy lake bottom. The city council approved the new bridge, an arch joining the tip of Lutakko to Peltoniemi in Kuokkala, on 11 April 1983.
Work started on the bridge on 15 October 1987. The bridge was built from both directions, with the two sides joining on 12 September 1988. The bridge was officially named "Kuokkalan silta" on 11 September 1989, following a naming competition and a first proposal of "Aallon silta" on 5 March 1987. When the 480-metre-long (1,570 ft) bridge was officially opened on 23 October 1989, it was Finland's fourth longest road bridge and the longest plate girder bridge.
See also
List of bridges in Finland
References
Literature
Jyväsjärven silta: sijaintipaikkavertailu ja esisuunnitelma 1.10.1979 (in Finnish). City of Jyväskylä. 1979. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
Jyväsjärven silta, Jyväskylä: alustava yleissuunnitelma (in Finnish). City of Jyväskylä. 1982. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
Päivänsalo, Martti (31 December 1992). Kuokkala – Päijänteen helmi: Raportti Jyväskylän Kuokkalan kaupunginosan suunnittelusta ja rakentamisesta v. 1973–1991 (in Finnish). City of Jyväskylä. ISBN 951-9164-16-2.
External links
Media related to Kuokkala Bridge at Wikimedia Commons
www.jkl.fi
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Kuokkala Bridge
- Kuokkala, Jyväskylä
- Jyväskylä
- Jyväsjärvi
- List of bridges in Finland
- Jyväskylä sub-region
- Riihimäki–Saint Petersburg railway
- Vladimir Lenin
- Vladimir Mayakovsky