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Arenas Bridge

Arenas Bridge
Arenas Bridge.jpg
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Arenas Bridge
Location of the Arenas Bridge in Puerto Rico
Location PR-735, Cayey / Cidra, Puerto Rico
Coordinates 18°08′04″N 66°08′17″W / 18.134325°N 66.138119°W / 18.134325; -66.138119Coordinates: 18°08′04″N 66°08′17″W / 18.134325°N 66.138119°W / 18.134325; -66.138119
Area less than one acre
Built 1894
Architect Sichar, Mariano; Nicrisse & Decluve, et al.
Architectural style metal truss
MPS Historic Bridges of Puerto Rico MPS
NRHP Reference # 95000843
Added to NRHP July 19, 1995

The Arenas Bridge is a truss bridge built in 1894 between the municipalities of Cayey and Cidra in Puerto Rico. Also known as Puente Rio La Plata, it was the longest bridge constructed in Puerto Rico during the Spanish colonial period. It crosses the Rio de la Plata, the longest river in Puerto Rico. According to the U.S. National Park Service, "[t]his is the most important metal bridge in Puerto Rico from the period." The bridge is still standing.

The bridge was built as "part of the Carretera Central, the first highway across the central mountains of Puerto Rico." The Carretera Central, a 134 kilometer highway between San Juan and the port of Ponce was largely completed by 1886, with temporary bridges in place at some crossings and 13 permanent bridges completed. The installation of the permanent Arenas Bridge in 1894 was near the completion of the Carretera in 1898.

Because of scarcity of iron in Puerto Rico, there were no metal fabricators in the country. Instead, bridges like this were fabricated overseas and shipped in parts to Puerto Rico. A Spanish government agent in Paris secured international bids, largely from French and Belgian firms, for bridges to be built in the overseas colonies of Spain. The Arenas Bridge itself was fabricated by Nicaise et Delcuve, a Belgian firm, and was shipped on the steamship Teutonia to Puerto Rico for assembly.

An alternative to a truss bridge would have been a suspension bridge design, which was a well-developed technology for long spans before the Arenas Bridge was built. However there were no truly long spans in Puerto Rico that would have absolutely required a suspension bridge in colonial times, as there are no particularly wide rivers or canyons, and chief engineer Manuel Sanchez-Nunez assessed that suspension bridges were unsuited to the tropical climate, even removing, a few years later, one that had been constructed in Caguas in 1857. As a result, suspension bridge technology was not widely employed in Puerto Rico. Even today it is believed that there are only three suspension bridges in the commonwealth, one being a modern pedestrian bridge in Bayamon.


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