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Stallbron


Stallbron (Swedish: "The Stable Bridge") is an arch bridge located in Gamla stan, the old town in central , Sweden. Stretching some 20 meters over Stallkanalen it connects Riksgatan passing through the Parliament Building on Helgeandsholmen to the square Mynttorget on Stadsholmen from where Västerlånggatan extends it further south.

It was named in the late 19th century after the Royal Stables which king Gustav Vasa had built on Helgeandsholmen in the 1530s, thereafter rebuilt by Karl IX 1604–12, and finally demolished in 1640 when the present stables were completed on Norrmalm, one km to the north.

Occupying one of the most central locations in Stockholm, Stallbron is, arguably, the location for the oldest bridge in the city. On its location was earlier found a wooden bridge, forming part of what was northern gate of the city, called Norrbro ("Northern bridge") and later Norrbrogatan ("Northern Bridge Street"). As an extension to Västerlånggatan it was directed more eastward, stretching diagonally across Helgeandsholmen, and leading to .

When the embankments of the watercourse were completed in the early 19th century, this original bridge was first replaced by a small footbridge in 1810 and then replaced by a cast-iron bridge in 1843, in its turn superseded by a 7.2-metre-wide (24 ft), vehicle-capable steel bridge in 1879. This last bridge was the first to be officially called Stallbron.

Around the turn of the century, when plans to relocate the Riksdag and the Riksbank to Helgeandsholmen were being elaborated, this diagonal street was finally replaced by a street perpendicular to the northern front of the , much in accordance to the plans once drawn by Nicodemus Tessin the Younger.


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