Parrikar to inaugurate Ist cable stay bridge of J&K on Dec 24

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Press Trust of India Jammu
Last Updated : Dec 21 2015 | 5:13 PM IST
Defence Minister Manohar Parrikar will dedicate the first cable-stayed bridge of North India to the nation on December 24, providing close connectivity between three northern states of Jammu and Kashmir, Himachal Pradesh and Punjab.
"The cable-stayed bridge at Basholi situated on Dunera- Basohli-Bhadharwah road will be inaugurated by Defence Minister Manohar Parrikar on December 24 at 0930 hours," a Defence Spokesman said today.
The Basohli bridge will be fourth of its kind in India and first in North India and Jammu and Kashmir.
Currently India has three cable-stayed bridges - Hooghly bridge at Kolkata, Naini Bridge in Allahabad and Rajiv Gandhi Sea Link in Mumbai.
With the completion of cable-stayed bridge over river Ravi in Basholi, the connectivity and tourism is expected to get a boost.
The work on the maiden cable stay bridge of the state was started in September 2011 on the persistent demand of people of Basohli where over 22 villages got submerged in water and were evacuated to other places after the construction of Ranjit Sagar dam.
The 592-meter span bridge is being constructed by Border Roads Organization (BRO) at a cost of Rs 145 crore.
It is a joint venture of IRCON a Railway Company and SP Singla Construction group.
Out of 592 m, 350 m span is cable-stayed while rest is plain bridge.
"A typical cable-stayed bridge is a deck with one or two pylons erected above the piers in the middle of the span," a senior officer said adding "the cables are attached diagonally to the girder to provide additional supports".
"The pylons form the primary load-bearing structure in these types of bridges. Large amounts of compression forces are transferred from the deck to the cables to the pylons and into the foundation," he said.
The officer said the Cable stayed-bridges have a low center of gravity, which makes them efficient in resisting earthquakes.
"Cable-stayed bridges provide outstanding architectural appearance due to their small diameter cables and unique overhead structure," he added.
"The peculiarity of this bridge is that the main span and back span are balanced by cable and this bridge has been designed by Canadian Company, Infinity Engineers. IIT New Delhi had approved the design of this bridge", he said.
The officer said nearly 300 ton specially designed cables are needed for this bridge which are being procured from Japan and Spain.
"The span layout is symmetric (121 meter - 350 meter - 121 meter), with pylons positioned at the top of the river banks. Two inclined cable planes splay outwards from each pylon in a semi-fan configuration, connecting to the superstructure at 14-meter spacing in the main span and 10.3 meters in the side spans," he said.
"Near the abutments, three sets of intermediate piers spaced at just over 20 meters form a secondary support system.
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The bridge will act as a lifeline for the people of Basohli and Bani tehsils and it will shorten the distance of travel to Punjab and HP to a great extent.
It will prove to be a tremendous boost to the socio- economic development of the region in terms of an increase in tourism and commercial activities and by virtue of the reduced distances to other important places in the region like Dalhousie and Chamba, he said.
With the construction of this bridge, it will help in promotion of tourism in the area as a large number of tourists visiting picnic spot of Dalhousie and other sight seeing places in neighbouring HP can also visit the Ranjit Sagar Dam at Basohli provided it is being developed as a tourist spot.
Moreover, it will also help in boosting pilgrimage tourism and other tourists to sight seeing places in Basohli, Bani and Billawar tehsils.
This bridge is strategically important from defence point of view also and first of its kind in North India and also having second longest span in India.
"It will be fourth bridge of its kind in the country after Worli in Mumbai, Hawra in Kolkatta and Nagpur in Maharashtra. It was the most challenging task before the BRO engineers to accomplish this task," he said.
"Not only the Indian engineers and consultants, the agencies from Canada, Japan, Spain and Switzerland have also been engaged for the completion of this prestigious project by the BRO authorities," he said.
UPA Chairperson Sonia Gandhi set into motion the construction of first cable-stayed bridge by laying foundation stone of the bridge on river Ravi at Basohli in Kathua district in May 2011.
Described as an engineering marvel in this part of the country, the foundation stone of this important bridge was laid in May 2011.
The work on the project was commenced in September 2011.
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First Published: Dec 21 2015 | 5:13 PM IST

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