Road bridge

Śląsko-Dąbrowski Bridge

Poland Warsaw municipal immovable monument in Poland
Śląsko-Dąbrowski Bridge
Śląsko-Dąbrowski Bridge · Wikipedia

About

Silesian–Dąbrowa Bridge (Polish: Most Śląsko-Dąbrowski) is a bridge over the Vistula River in Warsaw. It was built from 1947 to 1949 on the pillars which remained from the Kierbedź Bridge which had been destroyed in World War II. Due to the bridge's completely different structure, it is recognized as a new bridge, not a rebuilt one.

Śląsko-Dąbrowski Bridge

The name of the bridge commemorates the contribution of regions of Silesia and the Dąbrowa Basin in the reconstruction of the capital after the devastation of World War II. The bridge is an integral portion of the Warsaw W-Z Route main thoroughfare that, from 22 July, 1949, joined Praga in the east (one of Warsaw's least destroyed districts during World War II) with the city center, going through Muranów and out to Wola in the west. Unlike most of the Warsaw tram tracks, trams on this bridge originally shared the bridge space with cars.

Śląsko-Dąbrowski Bridge

In 2007, due to increased tram traffic along Route WZ during the modernization of tram routes on another major thoroughfare, Aleje Jerozolimskie, the tramway was separated from the roadway. This separation has continued even after traffic returned to normal and since 2009 the tramway also serves as a bus lane, significantly...

Śląsko-Dąbrowski Bridge