Loading Page...

What bridge took 14 years to build?

Construction of the Brooklyn Bridge Took 14 Years—And Multiple Lives. Horrific workplace accidents claimed a string of lives and left its designer dead and his son crippled.



People Also Ask

Considered a brilliant feat of 19th-century engineering, the Brooklyn Bridge was a bridge of many firsts. It was the first suspension bridge to use steel for its cable wire. It was the first bridge to use explosives in a dangerous underwater device called a caisson.

MORE DETAILS

The Brooklyn Bridge is older than the Manhattan Bridge. Designed by John Roebling, his son, Washington Roebling, completed it as chief engineer, according to Wikipedia, although he was ill for a large part of the building process.

MORE DETAILS

Brooklyn Bridge is a suspension/cable-stay hybrid bridge in New York City that connects Manhattan and Brooklyn. It is one of the oldest suspension bridges in United States (completed in 1883) and a first steel-wire suspension bridge in the world.

MORE DETAILS

The High Bridge (originally the Aqueduct Bridge) is the oldest bridge in New York City, having originally opened as part of the Croton Aqueduct in 1848 and reopened as a pedestrian walkway in 2015 after being closed for over 45 years.

MORE DETAILS

On May 30, 1883 — one week after it officially opened — 12 people were killed in a horrifying trample caused by the collapse of the Brooklyn Bridge. Except of course, the Bridge didn't actually collapse.

MORE DETAILS

History. The name is an acronym of Down Under the Manhattan Bridge Overpass. The area has been known variously as Rapailie, Olympia, and Walentasville; the developer who began its current gentrification is Two Trees Management, led at the time by David Walentas.

MORE DETAILS

Some of the toll-free bridges within the City include: Brooklyn Bridge. Ed Koch Queensboro (59th Street) Bridge. Manhattan Bridge.

MORE DETAILS