Wednesday, August 17, 2011

HISTORY OF THE ALKAFF BRIDGE

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Alkaff Bridge
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Coordinates: 1°17′24.3″N 103°50′23.8″E
Alkaff Bridge
阿卡夫桥

Official name Alkaff Bridge
Carries Pedestrians
Crosses Singapore River
Locale Singapore River, Singapore
Design Steel truss
Total length ~55 m
Opened 1999
Alkaff Bridge (Singapore's ArtBridge) is a pedestrian bridge in Singapore. It spans the Singapore River at Robertson Quay, located in the Singapore River planning area within the Central Area, Singapore's Central Business District.
The steel truss bridge is 55 metres in length and weighs about 230 tonnes. It is shaped like a tongkang (a light boat used commonly in the early days to carry goods along rivers), and is situated near the former Alkaff Quay. Alkaff Quay was named after a prominent Arabian family, the Alkaffs, who were among the wealthiest in Singapore during the early 20th century.
The bridge was built in 1997, as part of the Urban Redevelopment Authority's (URA) plan to create a promenade along both banks of the Singapore River.[1] The bridge, completed in 1999, is one of three footbridges — Alkaff Bridge, Robertson Bridge and Jiak Kim Bridge — built at Robertson Quay to improve the pedestrian connectivity between the two river banks.
Contents [hide]
1 Art bridge
2 References
3 See also
4 External links
[edit]Art bridge

The Alkaff Bridge was painted in January 2004 in vibrant colours by Filipino artist Pacita Abad (1946–2004) and a team of rope specialists. The artist and her crew of helpers used 55 different colours and more than 900 litres of industrial-strength paint to transform the bridge into Singapore's first "Bridge of Art".

ArtBridge Timeline
March 2003
Artist Pacita Abad begins three-month Visiting Artists Program at the Singapore Tyler Print Institute (STPI)
April 2003
Pacita conceives of project to paint the Alkaff bridge
May 2003
STPI supports Pacita’s ArtBridge project and begins to get the official approvals necessary to paint the Alkaff Bridge
November 2003
STPI receives all of the necessary approvals for the ArtBridge project. The Land Transport Authority gives its support and the Singapore Tourism Board and City Developments Limited provide working capital for the project. Nippon Paint donates all the paint for the Bridge and Pacita selects 55 colors. Professional Industrial Rope Access Services Pte Ltd (PIRAS) agrees to paint the Bridge at a subsidized rate and Michelle Tan agrees to be the project manager
December 2003
Pacita works with Visual Media Works to transform her colorful hand-painted Bridge sketches into detailed computerized workplans for the painters to follow.
December 23, 2003
The project team begins the cleaning and painting of the Bridge
December 28, 2003
The project team begins to paint the entire Bridge with a white primary base coat
January 2, 2004
The project team follows Pacita's workplan and begins to paint each of the six sections of the Bridge in different base colors: yellow, pink, red, green, blue and orange
January 10, 2004
The first of the 2,350 circle stencils in four designs and four sizes begin to arrive and are hand placed, one by one, on each of the Bridge's beams according to Pacita's workplan
January 18, 2004
Each stencil is hand painted in a variety of colors and after the paint is dry, the stencils are removed one by one
January 29, 2004
The "ArtBridge" is inaugurated
February 12, 2004
As a final touch, the railings are hand painted by the artist with multiple circles

[edit]References

^ G. Chandradas, Tien Chung Ping (21 August 2008). "Bridging the gap", The Straits Times.
[edit]See also

List of bridges in Singapore
Wikimedia Commons has media related to: Alkaff Bridge
[edit]External links

Press Release of the Painted Bridge's Inauguration
Singapore ArtBridge
Painted Alkaff Bridge Website
[hide]v · d · eBridges on the Singapore River
Alkaff · Anderson · Bayfront · Cavenagh · Clemenceau · Coleman · Elgin · Esplanade · Jiak Kim · Kim Seng · Ord · Pulau Saigon · Read · Robertson · The Helix

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Categories: Bridges completed in 1997 | Bridges in Singapore | Singapore River | Pedestrian bridges in Singapore

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