Peru Cable TV Bridge
Bridges of this type were useful since the Inca people did not use wheeled transport – traffic was limited to pedestrians and livestock – and they were frequently used by runners deliveri. The bridge was recently declared an icon by the mayor of Peru as a gift to Lima citizens in celebration of the "bicentenario" of independence. Cable-stayed Bailey bridges represent a fusion of modular steel bridge technology and advanced cable-supported design, offering unprecedented adaptability for Peru's complex terrain and infrastructure demands. Stretching across the Andes Mountains, Amazon rainforest, and coastal deserts, Peru's. The annually reconstructed Queshuachaca ("rope bridge") in the Quehue District is the last of its kind. The typology chosen to save the river Ene, a tributary of the Amazon, is s cable-stayed bridge with a concrete section and spans distribution of 95 + 270 + 135 + 135 + 270 + 105 m accompanied by a 384 m long access viaduct divided into 30m spans.
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