Çatalan Bridge

Bridge in Adana, Turkey
37°04′38″N 35°16′27″E / 37.0771°N 35.2742°E / 37.0771; 35.2742Carries2 lanes of Göl Kenarı RoadCrossesSeyhan DamLocaleAdana, TurkeyOfficial nameÇatalan KöprüsüMaintained byKarayolları Genel MüdürlüğüCharacteristicsMaterialReinforced concreteTotal length1575 mHistoryConstruction start1998Construction end2002Opened17 June 2002LocationMap

The Çatalan Bridge (Turkish: Çatalan Köprüsü), also known as the West Bridge (Turkish: Batı Köprüsü), is a 1,575 m (5,167 ft) long bridge crossing the Seyhan Dam Lake in Adana, Turkey. The bridge connects the city of Adana to the villages and vacation homes north of the lake. Despite crossing the Seyhan Dam Lake, the bridge is named after the Çatalan Dam, which is 14 kilometres (8.7 mi) north and the next dam upstream on the Seyhan River. The Çatalan bridge was the longest bridge in Turkey from its construction in 1998 to 2007, when it was surpassed by Viaduct No. 1 near Bolu and the longest bridge crossing a body of water until 2016, when it was surpassed by the Osman Gazi Bridge near Gebze.

The Çatalan (West) Bridge crossing Seyhan Dam Lake, seen from the campus of Çukurova University.

Construction was started in 1998 by a consortium of three companies: Lurgi Bamag, STFA and ALKE. The bridge opened to traffic on 17 June 2002.

External links

  • Çatalan Bridge
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Classical Era (to 330 AD)
pre-Roman
  • Lydian: Caravan (Kemer)
  • Phrygian: Cilandiras
  • Persian: Darius' Bosphorus Pontoon
  • Xerxes' Hellespont Pontoon
Roman (133 BC–AD 330)
Medieval (330–1453)
Byzantine Empire (330–1453)
Marwanids (983–1085)
Seljuk Sultanate of Rum (1077–1328)
Ilkhanid Mongols (1256–1335)
Artuqids (1101–1409)
Karamanids (1250–1487)
Eretnids (1335–1381)
Dulkadirids (1337–1517)
Ottoman (1299–1922)
Pre-conquest (1299–1452)
Expansion (1453–1566)
Stagnation (1566–1827)
Late Empire (1828–1922)
Republic Era (since 1923)
Box-girder/beam
Arch
Truss
Suspension
Cable-stayed
Balanced cantilever
Bridges in italics are under construction