Imbaba Bridge

Imbaba Bridge
Side view of the Imbaba Bridge
Coordinates30°04′30″N 31°13′32″E / 30.075104°N 31.225498°E / 30.075104; 31.225498
CrossesNile
OwnerGiza Governorate
Characteristics
MaterialSteel
Total length495 m (1624.19 ft)
History
DesignerDavid Tremblay
Constructed byBaume-Marpent
Construction start1889
Construction end1892
Rebuilt1924
Location
Interactive map of Imbaba Bridge

The Imbaba Bridge is a railway bridge located in Cairo, Egypt across the Nile River, about 935 kilometres (581 mi) downstream from the Aswan Dam.[1] It was designed by the French engineer David Tremblay.[2][3] The bridge was officially opened on May 15, 1892, by Khedive Abbas Hilmi II in a special ceremony. It is the only railway bridge across the Nile in Giza.[4]

The bridge witnessed two versions, similar to the Qasr al-Nil bridge. The older construction was completed in 1892, measuring roughly 495 meters in length, and designed to allow railways to cross the Nile River heading westwards to the Giza Train station.[5]

Overview

At that time, it was 495 meters long. It was later modified, and part of it was moved to Damietta, where it is now known as the Damietta Bridge.

While the old bridge was still in use, the new Imbaba Bridge, the current version was built between 1912 and 1924 by the Belgian firm Baume-Marpent.[6] The first iteration was constructed in 1892 to let trains cross the Nile west to the Giza Train Station.[4][7]

See also

References

  1. ^ Sadek, Nahla. "Flood Effects on Local Scour at Imbaba Bridge". CiteSeerX 10.1.1.302.5683.
  2. ^ "Imbaba Bridge (Cairo, 1924)". Structurae. Retrieved 2025-12-25.
  3. ^ Streets, Egyptian (2019-05-24). "Cairo's Bridges Over Time: Tracing a History of Construction | Egyptian Streets". Retrieved 2025-12-25.
  4. ^ a b Travel Cairo, Egypt. Boston: MobileReference.com. 2007. ISBN 978-1605010557.
  5. ^ "Old Imbaba Bridge, 1890". Tumblr. Archived from the original on 2025-02-17. Retrieved 2025-12-25.
  6. ^ Ramadan, Ahmed (12 November 2010). "Streets of Cairo: The bridges over troubled water". Egypt Independent. Retrieved 9 March 2014.
  7. ^ "Old Imbaba Bridge, 1890". Cairobserver. Retrieved 9 March 2014.

30°04′30″N 31°13′32″E / 30.0751°N 31.2255°E / 30.0751; 31.2255