Belvárosi Bridge (Szeged)

The Belvárosi Bridge in Szeged, Hungary, is the main bridge of the city, connecting Újszeged, on the left bank of the river Tisza, to the other quarters. It was the only crossing on the river in the County until the finishing of the Bertalan Bridge in 1979. Every year in May the Hídivásár (Bridgemarket) is held there, drawing thousands of visitors to the city.

Belvárosi Bridge

Belvárosi híd
Coordinates46°15′03″N 20°09′11″E
CrossesTisza
LocaleSzeged, Hungary
Other name(s)Régi híd (Old Bridge)
Characteristics
DesignLanger tied-arch bridge
Total length678,2
Piers in water2
No. of lanestwo lanes road and pedestrian
History
ArchitectGustave Eiffel and Feketeházy János
Construction start1880
Construction end1883
Rebuilt1948
Location

Its two ends are:

  • Roosevelt Square in Szeged, with the Móra Ferenc Múzeum
  • Torontál Square in Újszeged, with the Erzsébet Park

History

The old bridge opened in 1883.

After the Great Flood of Szeged in 1879,[1] it was an important aspect of the renovations to create a permanent crossing on the Tisza river. The construction began in 1880 December according to the plans of Gustave Eiffel and János Feketeházy, and finished on September 23 of 1883.

During the World War II it was seriously damaged on September 3, 1944[2] in an air attack by the Allies, then at October 9 the same year, German soldiers exploded it while withdrawing before Soviet troops.

The removal of the wreckage started only after the war in 1946, and the reconstruction took two years by the plans of Győző Mihailich and Róbert Folly. The renovated bridge finally reopened in 1948.

Between 1909–1944 and 1949–1979 the Tram line 5 ran through the bridge, since then Trolleybus lines 5 and 7 superseded it.

References

  1. "VII. A polgári város". www.sulinet.hu. Retrieved 2020-07-26.
  2. "Magyar kronológia - 1944. szeptember". web.archive.org. 2014-03-05. Retrieved 2020-07-26.

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.