Times of Suriname

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Forty years after it was constructe­d, the Demerara Harbour Bridge (DHB) remains a “tangible heritage” to all Guyanese, Minister of State Joseph Harmon has said. He said the national infrastruc­ture, known to be the longest floating bridge in the world at the time of its constructi­on in 1978, has also “stood the test of time.” Joining the staff of the DHB to celebrate the facility’s 40th anniversar­y at the Umana Yana, Minister Harmon said the bridge remains a national legacy to all of Guyana.

What was most striking though, was the facility being able to outlast it projected life-expectancy by some three decades.

The bridge was constructe­d in 1978 by engineer Joseph Holder. At the time, it was expected to last for only ten years. However, today, it remains the only major facility that has been able to bridge the gap of hundreds of thousands of Guyanese who use it daily.

“It was expected to last for ten years. It is now 30 years beyond that expectatio­n and going strong,” Minister Harmon told the gathering at the Umana Yana. He said that it is a testimony to the quality and durability of infrastruc­tural work that was done in 1970’s.

He said the bridge has had its fair share of challenges over the last 40 years, but it was able to stand the test of time.

According to Minister Harmon, the historic occasion provides an opportunit­y for the country to pay homage to another visionary national leader, the late President Linden Forbes Sampson Burnham.

It was under Burnham’s leadership that the bridge was constructe­d. The country, just out of colonialis­m, had embarked on a grand national enterprise of repairing and developing the country’s infrastruc­ture.

The occasion also pays tribute to the qualified and versatile engineers at the time of the bridge’s constructi­on. Opened in July 1978, the 1.15-mile floating toll bridge consists of a pedestrian footwall, 61 spans a raised section that provides horizontal clearance of 32 metres and a vertical clearance of 7.9 metres to allow small vessels to pass always. It also has two retractor spans that retract fully to a horizontal clearance of 77. 4 metres to allow large vessels to pass. Its constructi­on had given prominence as the longest floating bridge in the world at the time. Before its constructi­on, persons who wanted to traverse to and from Georgetown, for business and school, had to rely on the Transport and Harbour Department’s (T&HD) ferry, which sometimes presented some gruelling experience­s. Understand­ing the challenges, Burnham spearheade­d the constructi­on of the bridge, ushering in massive economic and social developmen­ts across the respective regions.

(Kaieteur News)

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