Double Takes Back
The Golden Gate Bridge
 

Suspension bridges are a good way to span a wide gap because they need only two support towers. These towers are usually on land or in the shallow water near the shore.

Strong cables hang between the two towers. The ends of the cables are attached to heavy anchor points on land. Small cables, called stringers, hang down and hold the deck in place.

 
 
Features of a suspension bridge
main cable Diagram showing features of a suspension bridge. Main cable: runs from one anchor point, up to the top of a support tower, across to another support tower, then down to another anchor point on the other side of the gap. Deck: flat surface that spans a wide gap. Anchor point: Heavy, well secured point that the ends of cables are attached to. Support tower: tall vertical pole that supports the main cable and are either on land or in shallow water near the shore. Stringers: Small cables that hang down and hold the deck in place
deck
anchor point
support tower
stringers
 
 
  The Golden Gate Bridge is a famous suspension bridge in California. It joins the city of San Francisco with the Marin Peninsula. For many years, it was the longest suspension bridge in the world.  
 
The Golden Gate Bridge
 
 
  Problems and Solutions

When the Golden Gate Bridge was being designed, engineers had a lot of problems to think about.

Tall towers - The towers of a suspension bridge are usually built near the shore. One tower of the Golden Gate Bridge had to be built in the ocean. To build a base for the tower, the bridge builders needed to work underwater - 100 feet below the ocean surface. They made a huge box that reached from the surface down to the ocean floor. Then they pumped the seawater out so that they could make the concrete base for the tower.

Build it strong! - The Golden Gate Bridge is built in a dangerous place. San Francisco is near a fault line, so there is always the danger of earthquakes. In 1906, an earthquake caused huge damage to the city. Because of this, the bridge engineers used over a million tons of concrete to build the anchors that hold the cables in place.
Strong winds that blow in from the Pacific Ocean can make the bridge sway from side to side. Even if they reach 100 miles per hour, the bridge will still stand tall. Engineers built the bridge so that it could swing sideways up to 27 feet!

Gigantic cables - Another challenge was making cables strong enough to hold up the heavy deck. It weighs over 150,000 tons. Engineers needed cables that were over 36 inches thick to hold that weight. They had to make the big cables from smaller wires. It took 80,000 miles of wire to do the job!

There wasn't a crane big enough to lift these heavy cables, so they couldn't be made at a factory and taken to the bridge. They had to be made by machines that were right next to the bridge and then pulled across the two towers.

 
 
  Animation of Golden Gate Bridge construction: 1. Anchor points are placed either side of span and foundations for the two support towers are placed in the ground under the sea. 2: Two support towers were put up on the foundations, and the main cable was attached to the top of the towers and to the anchor points at each end of the span. 3: Working from both ends of the bridge, stringers were hung from the main cable, each supporting a little bit of the flat deck, until they met in the middle, completing the bridge.
 
 
Bridge Facts: START DATE-January 5, 1933; FINISH DATE-May 27,1937; LENGTH-8,981 feet; MATERIALS-steel and concrete; COST-$27 million
 
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