Vivekananda Setu

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Vivekananda Setu (also called Willingdon Bridge and Bally Bridge) is a bridge over the Hooghly River in West Bengal, India. It links the city of Howrah, at Bally, to Kolkata, at Dakshineswar. Completed in 1931, it is a multispan truss bridge that was built to primarily to provide direct road and rail connectivity between the Calcutta Port and the major railhead at Howrah railway station on the West bank of the Hooghly River.[1] It is Template:Convert long having 9 spans in total.[2] The famous Dakshineswar Kali Temple is situated on the banks of the Hooghly River near the bridge.[3] The bridge is one of the four bridges linking both sides of Kolkata city. A new road bridge, the Nivedita Setu, was constructed Template:Convert downstream in 2007 due to weakening of the Vivekanada Setu caused by its ageing.[3][4]

Naming

The bridge was originally named Willingdon Bridge after Viceroy of India, Freeman Freeman-Thomas, 1st Marquess of Willingdon.[5][3] It was eventually renamed as Bally Bridge, before officially renamed as Vivekananda Setu.[3]

Construction

File:Vivekananda Setu-Bally, Kolkata-West Bengal 700076-DSC 0018.jpg
Vivekananda Setu sunrise view
File:Vivekananda Setu bridge during sunset.jpg
Vivekananda Setu during sunset

The erection and caissoning of the bridge was done by the noted Kutchi-Mestri railway contractor and industrialist Rai Bahadur Jagmal Raja.[5][6] His nameplate can still be seen on each girder of the bridge.[5] The construction of bridge started in year 1926 and was completed in year 1931.[6][5] The fabrication of the bridge was done at works of Braithwaite & Company, Calcutta.[6][5]

The viaduct consists of 22 spans of Template:Convert girders built of masonry piers, whose foundations have been piled with reinforced concrete piles Template:Convert long. The bridge itself consists of seven Template:Convert main spans and two Template:Convert land spans. The eight main piers in the river are founded on octagonal steel caissons, Template:Convert, having two dredging holes each Template:Convert in diameter. The caissons were all floated into position and founded by loading with concrete, sustaining the load on compressed air buoyancy and releasing the air on a suitable falling tide.[2] The bridge is approximately Template:Convert long with Template:Convert long approach roads on both sides.[5][7] The foundation was laid with well-sinking Template:Convert down the river beds. Girding, erection of abutments and arching were all done by Rai Bahadur Jagmal Raja.[5] This railway bridge is also important in the annals of history of railways in India because the railway for the first time crossed over River Hooghly and reached Calcutta at Sealdah Terminus thus connecting the East and West banks of the river.[5]

The bridge was by far the most expensive and the most difficult of the railway bridges to be constructed in India up to that time. The bridge was constructed at a total cost of Template:INRconvert

The first train that ran across the bridge was named Jagmal Raja Howrah Express by the British, acknowledging the feat of Rai Bahadur Jagmal Raja. The bridge cost over Template:INRconvert in those years.[5]

Usage

File:VIVEKANANDA Setu, Kolkata.jpg
Front View of Vivekananda Setu

The bridge serves both road and rail:

The bridge had become weak as a result of ageing, and with heavy traffic, even repairs became difficult. Thus a second road bridge, the Nivedita Setu was constructed parallel to it and around Template:Convert downstream.[8] It was opened to traffic in 2007. Following this the Vivekananda Setu allows traffic movement for light vehicles, namely passenger vehicles, while the Nivedita Setu helps traffic movement of heavy vehicles, like trucks. While trucks and other heavy vehicles are not allowed on the Vivekananda Setu, two and three wheelers are not allowed on the toll bridge of Nivedita Setu.[8]

See also

References

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  7. Conditions and Prospects of United Kingdom Trade in India: (with a Brief Account of the Trade of Burma). Great Britain. Dept. of Overseas Trade ;H.M. Stationery Office, 1928 - India pp:136.
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