Friedrichs Bridge (German: Friedrichsbrücke) is a bridge in Berlin, one of several crossing the Spree between Museum Island and the mainland portion of Mitte. It connects Anna-Louisa-Karsch-StraÃÂe with BodestraÃÂe. Since its creation in 1703, the bridge has been repeatedly renovated. It is considered a protected monument.
Timeline
Here is a brief historical overview of the bridge:
- 1703: Construction of a wooden bridge known as the Great Bridge to Pomeranze
- 1769: Construction of a vaulted brick bridge with a flap in the middle
- 1792: Renamed Friedrich's Bridge after King Frederick the Great of Prussia
- 1823: Replacement of vault and bridge flap by cast iron Tudor arches
- 1873âÂÂ1875: Bridge widened from to and redesigned as a six-span bridge with stone pillars and cast iron sheets
- 1893âÂÂ1894: Bridge completely rebuilt to achieve higher headroom required by shipping. Obelisks added at bridge ends; widened to
- 1945: Blasted by the Wehrmacht
- 1950âÂÂ1951: Construction of temporary wooden bridge
- 1981: Construction of a prestressed concrete frame bridge as footbridge without river piers spanning
- 2012âÂÂ2014: Reconstruction of the bridge on the historical width of
References
External links