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The Incheon Bridge () is a reinforced concrete
cable-stayed bridge A cable-stayed bridge has one or more ''towers'' (or ''pylons''), from which wire rope, cables support the bridge deck. A distinctive feature are the cables or wikt:stay#Etymology 3, stays, which run directly from the tower to the deck, norm ...
in South Korea. At its opening in October 2009, it became the second bridge connection between Yeongjong Island and the mainland of
Incheon Incheon is a city located in northwestern South Korea, bordering Seoul and Gyeonggi Province to the east. Inhabited since the Neolithic, Incheon was home to just 4,700 people when it became an international port in 1883. As of February 2020, ...
. The Incheon Bridge is South Korea's longest spanning
cable-stayed bridge A cable-stayed bridge has one or more ''towers'' (or ''pylons''), from which wire rope, cables support the bridge deck. A distinctive feature are the cables or wikt:stay#Etymology 3, stays, which run directly from the tower to the deck, norm ...
. In comparison, it is the world's sixteenth longest cable-stayed bridge as of January 2019. The bridge provides direct access between Songdo and
Incheon International Airport Incheon International Airport is the main international airport serving Seoul, the capital of South Korea. It is also one of the largest and busiest airports in the world. This airport opened for business on 29 March 2001, to replace the old ...
, reducing travel time between them by up to one hour. The section of the bridge crossing the sea, whose concessionaire is Incheon Bridge Corporation, is funded by the private sector. Korea Expressway Corporation and the Korean Ministry of Land, Transport and Maritime Affairs (MLTM) managed the project. The bridge is located to the south of the Yeongjong Bridge (which was the first bridge connection between Yeongjong Island and the mainland} and the Third Incheon Bridge (project to open in 2025).


Construction

The main design and build contractor was Samsung C&T Corporation JV ( Daelim,
Daewoo Daewoo ( ; ; ; ; literally "great universe" and a portmanteau of "''dae''" meaning great, and the given name of founder and chairman Kim Woo-choong) also known as the Daewoo Group, was a major South Korean chaebol (type of conglomerate) and aut ...
, GS,
Hanjin The Hanjin Group () is a South Korean chaebol. The group has various industries covered from transportation and airlines to hotels, tourism, and airport businesses, and is one of the largest chaebols in Korea. The group includes Korean Air (KA ...
,
Hanwha Hanwha Group () is a large business conglomerate (chaebol) in South Korea. Founded in 1952 as Korea Explosives Co. (), the group has grown into a large multi-profile business conglomerate, with diversified holdings stretching from explosivesthei ...
, Kumho). Total costs were , including federally funded approach roads. The highway project consisted of government-built sections at three ends and a section in the middle built with private capital. The bridge section is long. The bridge has a cable stayed section over the main sea route to Incheon port. This was the most difficult part to construct, with a main tower high, vertical clearance of , and five spans: a centre span of flanked on either side by spans of and . Adjacent to the center section are approach spans consisting of a series of balanced cantilever spans. Lower-level viaducts consisting of spans connect to land at each end of the bridge. An
arch An arch is a curved vertical structure spanning an open space underneath it. Arches may support the load above them, or they may perform a purely decorative role. As a decorative element, the arch dates back to the 4th millennium BC, but stru ...
span is located on the Incheon side of the bridge, which consists of two red-colored identical arches on each side of the bridge deck.


Design

Because the bridge is situated in a known seismically active region, a seismic design of the substructure was adopted. At 12.3 km long, with a main cable stayed span of 800m, the new Incheon Bridge is one of the five longest of its type in the world. Its 33.4m wide steel/concrete composite deck carries six lanes of traffic 74 m above the main shipping route in and out of Incheon port and links Incheon International Airport on Yeongjong Island to the international business district of New Songdo City and the metropolitan districts of South Korea's capital, Seoul. The cable stayed section of the crossing is 1,480 m long, made up of five spans measuring 80 m, 260 m, 800 m, 260 m and 80 m respectively: height of the inverted-Y main towers is 230.5 m. A 1.8 km approach span and 8.7 km viaduct complete the crossing, both constructed with precast prestressed concrete box girder decks. Foundations are drilled piles 3 m in diameter. In order to accommodate movement between the bridge decks, the Incheondaegyo was equipped with expansion joints weighing up to 50 tons per joint.


Notable incidents

On May 20, 2010, twelve passengers were killed in a bus crash at the bridge.


In popular media

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Rough Cut In filmmaking, the rough cut (also known as the first cut or editor's cut) is the second of three stages of offline editing. The term originates from the early days of filmmaking when film stock was physically cut and reassembled, but is still ...
: The bridge, under construction, was used as a backdrop for a fight sequence and appeared in promotional images for the film


Gallery

File:Incheon Bridge under construction.jpg, main span of Incheon Bridge under construction File:Incheon bridge (12).jpg, The cable stayed section File:Incheon bridge 20091031 001.jpg, Road view approaching the cable-stayed section File:Incheon bridge toll gate 20091031.jpg, The toll gate, on Yeongjong Island File: Incheon bridge (1).jpg, Ongnyeon Bridge


References


External links


Official Website

Roadtraffic Technology
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{{Authority control Cable-stayed bridges in South Korea Arch bridges in South Korea Bridges completed in 2009 Songdo International Business District Toll bridges in South Korea Bridges in Incheon Cross-sea bridges in Asia