Lansdowne Bridge Rohri
The Lansdowne Bridge Rohri is a former railway bridge over the Indus River in present-day Pakistan.
A marvel of 19th-century engineering, the 'longest 'rigid' girder
bridge in the world' at that time, it was begun in 1887.[1] It was
designed by Sir Alexander Meadows Rendel; the girder work, weighing a
massive 3,300 tons, was manufactured in London by the firm of West wood,
Baillie and erected by F.E. Robertson, and Hecquet.
The Indus Valley State Railway had reached Sukkur in 1879 and the steam
ferry that transported eight wagons at a time across the Indus
between Rohri and Sukkur was found to be cumbersome and time consuming.
The ferry link became redundant when Lord Reay, Governor of Bombay,
deputizing for Lord Lansdowne the viceroy, inaugurated the Bridge on
March 25, 1889.
As summer comes early to Sukkur and the heavy
European-style uniforms of the time would have been uncomfortable, the
opening ceremony took place early in the morning. At the ceremony, Lord
Reay unlocked a highly ornamental padlock (designed by J.L. Kipling,
CIE, Principal of the Mayo School of Art in Lahore and father of Joseph
Rudyard, the famous poet and author) which held shut the cumbersome iron
gates guarding entry to the bridge. The gathered dignitaries then
walked across the bridge and adjourned to breakfast followed by toasts
under a shaman (Berridge 1967:128). The bridge provided the railway link
between Lahore, in the heart of the granary of British India, and the
port of Karachi on the Arabian Sea.
When the great steel Ayub arch
was constructed (1960–1962), railway traffic was shifted there. About a
hundred feet apart, the two bridges seem like one from a distance. The
Ayub arch became the world's third longest railway arch span and the
first bridge in the world to have "the railway desk slung on coiled wire
rope suspenders." The consulting engineer was David B. Stein man of New
York, proponent of 'vocational aesthetics'. It cost about two crore
rupees and the foundation stone was laid on December 9, 1960. It was
opened by President Muhammad Ayub Khan on May 6, 1962.
A marvel of 19th-century engineering, the 'longest 'rigid' girder bridge in the world' at that time, it was begun in 1887.[1] It was designed by Sir Alexander Meadows Rendel; the girder work, weighing a massive 3,300 tons, was manufactured in London by the firm of West wood, Baillie and erected by F.E. Robertson, and Hecquet.
The Indus Valley State Railway had reached Sukkur in 1879 and the steam ferry that transported eight wagons at a time across the Indus between Rohri and Sukkur was found to be cumbersome and time consuming. The ferry link became redundant when Lord Reay, Governor of Bombay, deputizing for Lord Lansdowne the viceroy, inaugurated the Bridge on March 25, 1889.
As summer comes early to Sukkur and the heavy European-style uniforms of the time would have been uncomfortable, the opening ceremony took place early in the morning. At the ceremony, Lord Reay unlocked a highly ornamental padlock (designed by J.L. Kipling, CIE, Principal of the Mayo School of Art in Lahore and father of Joseph Rudyard, the famous poet and author) which held shut the cumbersome iron gates guarding entry to the bridge. The gathered dignitaries then walked across the bridge and adjourned to breakfast followed by toasts under a shaman (Berridge 1967:128). The bridge provided the railway link between Lahore, in the heart of the granary of British India, and the port of Karachi on the Arabian Sea.
When the great steel Ayub arch was constructed (1960–1962), railway traffic was shifted there. About a hundred feet apart, the two bridges seem like one from a distance. The Ayub arch became the world's third longest railway arch span and the first bridge in the world to have "the railway desk slung on coiled wire rope suspenders." The consulting engineer was David B. Stein man of New York, proponent of 'vocational aesthetics'. It cost about two crore rupees and the foundation stone was laid on December 9, 1960. It was opened by President Muhammad Ayub Khan on May 6, 1962.
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