With a a 2,023-meter (6,637 feet) span between its towers,
the “1915 Canakkale Bridge” becomes the world’s longest suspension bridge,
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said.
It connects the town of Gelibolu, located in the European
side of Turkey’s northwestern province of Canakkale, with the town of Lapseki
on the Asian side. The bridge allows travelers to cross the Dardanelles — which
connects the Aegean Sea with the Sea of Marmara — in just six minutes compared
to the previous 1 1/2 hours by ferry, the president said.
“Turkey has overtaken Japan, which has the longest bridge in
the world in terms of the midspan, and has taken the first place,” Erdogan said
during the inauguration ceremony.
The inauguration was timed to coincide with the 107th
anniversary of Turkey’s World War I naval victory over a joint British and
French fleet attacking the Dardanelles.
The failure of the naval campaign led to the ill-fated 1915
landings on the Gallipoli peninsula by the allies led by Britain and France
along with troops from Australia and New Zealand.
“The 1915 Canakkale Bridge will leave this history of
collision and conflict behind and will be a bridge between East and West,
starting a new era of peace and prosperity,” South Korean Prime Minister Kim
Boo-kyum said during the ceremony, in reference to the Canakkale region’s
historic battlefields.
The bridge, which was build by a consortium of Turkish and
South Korean companies, will also strengthen the bonds between Turkey and South
Korea, Kim said.
The “1915 Canakkale Bridge” cost 2.5 billion euros ($2.7
billion) to build but Turkey will save 415 million euros ($458 million) per
year from a reduction of fuel consumption and carbon emissions, Erdogan said.
He announced the bridge’s toll will be 200 Turkish lira ($13.60).
The bridge’s architecture is awash with symbolism. It’s
central span of 2,023 meters (6,637 feet) is in recognition of the year 2023,
when Turkey celebrates the centenary of the founding of the Turkish Republic
following the collapse of the Ottoman Empire, Erdogan said. The height of the
bridge’s towers is 318 meters (1,043 feet) — a nod to March 18 (or 3/18) when
Turkey commemorates soldiers killed during the Gallipoli sea and land battles.
The World War I Gallipoli campaign aimed to secure a naval
route from the Mediterranean Sea to Istanbul through the Dardanelles, and take
the Ottoman Empire out of the war.
The April 25, 1915 Gallipoli landings marked the start of a
fierce battle that lasted for eight months. Around 44,000 Allied troops and
86,000 Ottoman soldiers died in the fighting. -AP