Ekelundsbron

Coordinates: 59°20′26.60″N 18°00′46.75″E / 59.3407222°N 18.0129861°E / 59.3407222; 18.0129861
Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Ekelundsbron seen from Solna

Ekelundsbron (

Solna
.

The bridge is named after the

crofter's holding once found nearby called Ekelund or Eklundstorpet (ek = "oak", lund = "grove", torp = "cottage"), which also gave its name to the shanty town found here around 1880. The bridge was earlier called Karlbergsbron.[1]

Historically, the bridge was a simple wooden bridge crossing a clogged canal. When the canal was rebuilt in 1864, a 34.5-metre-long (113 ft) and 5.5-metre-wide (18 ft) steel swing bridge replaced the old bridge. A 12-metre-wide (39 ft) concrete bridge resting on concrete arches built in 1956 proved insufficient by 1969 and was thus replaced by a 24-metre-wide (79 ft) bridge. [2]

See also

References

  1. ^ "Stadshagen". Stockholms gatunamn (2nd ed.). Stockholm: Kommittén för Stockholmsforskning. 1992. p. 200. .
  2. ^ Dufwa, Arne (1985). "Broar och viadukter: Ekelundsbron". Stockholms tekniska historia: Trafik, broar, tunnelbanor, gator. Uppsala: Stockholms gatukontor and Kommittén för Stockholmsforskning. p. 196. .


59°20′26.60″N 18°00′46.75″E / 59.3407222°N 18.0129861°E / 59.3407222; 18.0129861