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Old Yamuna Bridge

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Old Yamuna Bridge Delhi

Lohe-ka-Pul
Old Yamuna Bridge Delhi
Coordinates28°39′49″N 77°14′55″E / 28.66361°N 77.24861°E / 28.66361; 77.24861
Carries4 lanes
LocaleDelhi, India
Official nameBridge no 249
Characteristics
Designdouble-decked truss bridge
MaterialSteel
Total length930.25 metres (3,052 ft)
History
Construction start1863
Construction end1866
Statistics
Daily trafficRailroad
Location
Map

The Old Yamuna Bridge, also known as Lohe-ka-Pul, or "bridge number 249", located in Delhi, is one of the longest and oldest bridges in India. Construction of the bridge began in 1863 and finished in 1866,[1] with it opening for public use in 1867.[2] The bridge is a double-decked steel truss bridge that runs east-west across the Yamuna river, connecting the district of Central Delhi to the district of Shahdara. It was constructed in 1866 by the East India Railway at a cost of £1,616,335,[3] and has a total length of 2,640 feet (804.67 m) feet with 12 spans of 202.5 feet (61.72 m) each.[3]

In the nineteenth century, two principal cities of North India, Kolkata and Delhi, were connected by railways, the bridge being the last link on this route. The bridge initially had a single line, and was later converted to a double line. There is a discrepancy about the year the second line was added; one source says that "In 1913, this was converted into a double line by adding down line girders of 12 spans of 202 feet each and 2 end spans of 42 feet to the bridge."[3] But another source says "It was built for a single railway line but converted into a double line in 1932 and reopened in 1934"[4] because of increased traffic on this section.

It has the capacity of serving roadways as well as railways simultaneously. The upper deck carries a two-lane railway line which connects Old Delhi railway station to Shahdra railway station, while the lower deck carries road traffic.

A new 992.25 metres (3,255 ft) long bridge is under construction adjacent to the Old Yamuna Bridge.[5][6]

The bridge was commissioned in 1866, but before that, the original Delhi Junction came up in April 1864 in a temporary building before the first train service started. That structure could accommodate only 100 passengers at that time and had only two platforms. The first train from Howrah arrived in Delhi in 1864, but there was no direct line up to the station. So the passengers had to get down before the river and cross it by boat. Sometimes even coaches also crossed to the junction on boats, according to railway officials.[7]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "Old Yamuna Bridge". Outlook Traveller. Retrieved 18 October 2018.
  2. ^ "Old Yamuna Bridge". Retrieved 18 October 2018.
  3. ^ a b c "Yamuna-Railway-Bridge". Retrieved 17 October 2018.
  4. ^ "A bridge of stories". Retrieved 28 October 2018.
  5. ^ "Construction ban extended till Nov 21, Metro projects among those exempted". Hindustan Times. 18 November 2021. Retrieved 16 December 2021. Among important railway projects in the city where work will continue is construction of the new Yamuna Bridge – being built parallel to the Old Yamuna bridge (Loha Pul). The new structure was set to be completed by December 2020, but COVID-19 delayed work.
  6. ^ Rajput, Abhinav (15 June 2023). "New Yamuna bridge may be ready by Sept". Times of India. Retrieved 7 January 2024.
  7. ^ "Delhi: Work on bridge parallel to Loha Pul enters final lap". timesofindia. Retrieved 7 March 2023.