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Wang Xiaojing

Deputy Director of Research Institute of Highway the Ministry of Communications...



Dai Dongchang

Dai Dongchang graduated in 1983 from the Speciality of Road Engineering of Shanghai Tongji University with a Bachelor’s degree.

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HOME >Ancient Beam Bridges
 

Ancient Beam Bridges 

 

www.chinamotorway.com 2005-09-15 15:18:09

The earliest reference to the beam bridge in Chinese history is the Ju Bridge dating from the Shang Dynasty (16th-11th century B.C.). King Wu of the Zhou Dynasty launched a campaign against King Zhou (Zhou Wang), and having captured Zhaoge -capital of the Shang Dynasty (now northeast to Quzhou County, Hebei Province), at the Ju Bridge, he ordered a hoard of millet distributed to the relief of the poor. From the Zhou Dynasty through to the Qin and Han Dynasties, bridges with timber beams and stone piers were predominant.

During the Song Dynasty, a large number of stone-pier and stone-beam bridges were constructed. In Quanzhou alone, as recorded in ancient books, 110 bridges were erected during the two centuries, including ten well-known ones. For example, the 362-span Anping Bridge was known for its length of 5 li (2,223m), a national record for over 700 years, and so gained the other name Five Li Bridge. It is now 2,100m long. Its construction lasted 16 years, from the 8th year (A.D. 1138) to the 21st year (A.D. 1151) of the reign of Shaoxing of the Song Dynasty.


 

 Anping Bridge

Another famous one is the 47-span Wan'an Bridge, situated at the outlet of the Luoyang River to the sea, better known as Luoyang Bridge. It is about 890m long and 3.7m wide. The construction began in the 5th year of the reign of Huangyou (A.D. 1053) and ended in the 4th year of the reign of Jiayu (A.D. 1059) of the Song Dynasty. Both bridges are included in the list of major cultural relics under state protection.
 

Luoyang Bridge

The Jiangdong Bridge in Zhangzhou, Fujian Province boasts the largest stone beams. In the first year of the reign of Jiaxi (A.D. 1237) of the Song Dynasty, the timber beams of this bridge were replaced by stone ones. The bridge had 15 spans; each consisted of 3 slices of stone beams. But today only 5 spans remain. The largest stone beam, 23.7m in length, 1.7m in width and 1.9m in height, weighs 2000 kN (200 tons). It seems incredible that such an arduous task could be performed then as there was no heavy-duty craning equipment to quarry the stone and to haul to the site and set in position such enormous stone beams.

To elongate the span, either the timber beams or the stone ones were placed horizontally on top of each other, the upper layer cantilevering over the lower one, thus supporting the simple beam in the middle. That kind of stone beam is called Diese (overlapping beam), which, however, could not extend long; while the timber cantilever beam, called "flying bridge" or "extended arm bridge", could reach as far as 20m. The earliest record of the timber cantilever beam dates as far back as the 4th century B.C. The extant single-span timber cantilever bridge, the Yinping Bridge at Wenxian, Gansu Province, which was rebuilt in the Qing Dynasty, has a span of more than 60m with covered housings on it.

It was a common practice to build bridge houses or galleries on timber beam bridges, and a case in point is the fengyu bridge (all-weather bridge) built by the Dong people. Situated at Sanjiang Dong Autonomous County, Guangxi Zhuangzu Autonomous Region, the Chengyang Bridge across the Yongji River, built in 1916, is a 644m 4-span timber cantilever covered bridge. Each of its 5 piers is crowned by a pavilion and the decks are roofed by a spacious gallery, which joins the pavilions. The pavilions not only perform the function of balance, but have added to the charm and elegance of the bridge as well.


 

 Chengyang Bridge


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