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The Rod El Farag Axis Bridge. The Rod El Farag Axis Bridge or simply Tahya Misr Bridge (Arabic: كوبري تحيا مصر) is a cable-stayed bridge over the Nile river located in the region of Rod El Farag crossing through Cairo, Egypt. It was built by the Arab Contractors.
The Rod El Farag Bridge over the Nile river, which is part of the Tahya Misr Axis crossing the Egyptian capital of Cairo, built by the Egyptian company Arab Contractors, is the world's widest cable-stayed bridge [8] [9] built over the course of 4 years until it was completed in 2019, achieving the Guinness World Record with a width of 67.3 meters.
"Enhancing Historic Metallic Bridges' Rehabilitation Policies In Egypt". Journal of Engineering and Applied Science. 67 (1). Faculty Of Engineering, Cairo University: 119– 138. Chen, Wai-Fah; Duan, Lian (2014). "Bridge Engineering in Egypt". In CRC Press, Taylor & Francis Group (ed.). Handbook of International Bridge Engineering. CRC Press. p ...
Rod El Farag Axis Bridge This page was last edited on 3 June 2021, at 18:22 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 ...
In April 2016, on a rare visit to Egypt, King Salman of Saudi Arabia announced with Egypt's President El-Sisi an agreement to build a bridge between the two countries. [9] The announcement followed Egypt and Saudi Arabia signing an agreement on maritime border demarcation and marking the islands of Tiran and Sanafir within Saudi regional waters ...
The 1.6-mile bridge spans Baltimore's harbor, and photos show steel rods still wrapped around the container ship that rammed into it. ... See photos of the destruction and rescue operation below.
Gov. Wes Moore revealed the new design of Baltimore's Francis Scott Key Bridge that collapsed into the Patapsco River after being struck by vessel that lost power on March, 26, 2025.
Egypt ratified the convention on 7 February 1974, the second country to do so after the United States. [3] There are seven World Heritage Sites in Egypt, and a further 34 sites on the tentative list. [4] The first sites in Egypt were listed in 1979, when five properties were inscribed.