Haliç Bridge

Bridge in Istanbul, Turkey
41°02′36″N 28°56′30″E / 41.04333°N 28.94167°E / 41.04333; 28.94167Carries9 lanes of the O-1 motorwayCrossesGolden HornLocaleAyvansaray–Halıcıoğlu, Istanbul, TurkeyOfficial nameHaliç KöprüsüOther name(s)Halic Bridge
Golden Horn BridgeOwnerMetropolitan Municipality of IstanbulCharacteristicsTotal length995 m (3,264 ft)Width32 m (105 ft)Height22 m (72 ft)HistoryEngineering design byIHI Corporation
Julius Berger-Bauboag AGConstruction start1971Construction end1974Opened10 September 1974LocationMap
Haliç Bridge is located in Istanbul
Haliç Bridge
Haliç Bridge
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Location of Haliç Bridge in Istanbul

The Haliç Bridge (Turkish: Haliç Köprüsü, Golden Horn Bridge) is a road bridge across the Golden Horn in Istanbul, Turkey. It connects the neighbourhoods of Ayvansaray in the southwest and Halıcıoğlu in the northwest. The bridge carries the O-1 motorway, also known as the Istanbul Inner Beltway. It was constructed between 1971 and 1974, and entered service on 10 September 1974. The engineering work was carried out by IHI Corporation of Japan and Julius Berger-Bauboag AG of Germany. The bridge is 995 m (3,264 ft) long and 32 m (105 ft) wide, and stands 22 m (72 ft) above sea level.

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Wikimedia Commons has media related to Haliç Köprüsü.
Crossings of the Golden Horn
Upstream
Fil Bridge
(Alibeyköy Creek)
Kazım Karabekir Avenue Bridge
(Kağıthane Creek)
Haliç Bridge
O-1
Downstream
Atatürk Bridge
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Classical Era (to 330 AD)
pre-Roman
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


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