Zalige Bridge

If you can’t beat them, join them

Zalige Bridge in Nijmegen

Living with the water

The Dutch know how to live with water. The Zalige Bridge in Nijmegen by NEXT archi­tects in coope­ra­rion with H+N+S Land­scape Archi­tects is the proof. The bridge is slowly submer­ging under the rising water and is reachable only through step­ping stones. It becomes the ulti­mate place to expe­ri­ence high water.

In the Dutch city of Nijmegen, where the bridge is located, water levels of 11,50 m NAP+ are being measured. Such height was reached only once in the last 15 years. In the past this would have been a threat, but now the high water becomes an attrac­tion. People walk over the bridge and through the river park to see and expe­ri­ence the high water.

A bypass for the river

Zalige Bridge is part of “Room for the River”, a nation-wide project initiated by the Ministry of Infra­struc­ture and the Envi­ron­ment in coope­ra­tion with provinces and muni­ci­pa­li­ties that prevents floo­ding by giving more room to the rivers. Room for the river Waal is the largest project within the national programme and involved relo­ca­ting the dike and cons­truc­ting an ancil­lary channel in the flood plains: a bypass for the river.

Zalige Bridge was completed in March 2016. Michel Schrei­ne­ma­chers, partner at NEXT archi­tects, empha­sises the rela­tion between bridge and land­scape: “This bridge is build on the flood­plains. This fact was used to design a bridge that strongly connects and inter­acts with the river land­scape as a path over the water.”

Normally, the river has an average height of 7 m NAP+ and the bridge stands high above the water. The bridge landings and the step­ping stones have been desi­gned to be perfectly aligned with the profile of the land­scape. When water levels rise, some parts of the bridge will submerge, chan­ging its appearance and use. “It makes people expe­ri­ence the chan­ging water levels” says Schrei­ne­ma­chers.

Architect

NEXT archi­tects
Paul van Vlis­sin­gen­straat 2a
NL — 1096 BK Amsterdam

Team

Michel Schrei­ne­ma­chers, Marijn Schenk, Bart Reuser, Jurriaan Hiller­ström, Luuc Sonke, Maarten Vermeulen, Inge­borg Kuij­laars

Client

Muni­ci­pa­lity of Nijmegen

Construction company

I‑Lent (Dura Vermeer Divisie Infra BV en Ploegam BV)

Photographs

© NEXT archi­tects / Photo­graphs: Jan Daanen
© NEXT archi­tects / Photo­graphs: Rutger Hollander
© NEXT archi­tects / Photo­graphs: Jeroen Bosch
© NEXT archi­tects / Photo­graphs: Jennie Burgers

Author

NEXT archi­tects 

Address

Zali­ge­brug
NL — 6541 AH Nijmegen

Arieal view

Thank you, Google!

Opening

2016

Construction costs

€4,700.000

No high water / high water

Section

High water becomes an attraction

In January 2018 the Zalige Bridge proved itself for the first time. Water levels rose up to the highest point in 15 years. The high water became an attrac­tion, with the bridge as the ulti­mate place to expe­ri­ence the event. Throug­hout the year, the river Waal has an average height of 7 m +NAP and the bridge stands high above the water. When the river reached 10,5 m +NAP, the bridge landings submerged and the step­ping stones became the only inter­mit­tent path giving access to the bridge. People walked over the bridge and through the river park to see and expe­ri­ence the high water. When the step­ping stones got under water, the bridge became inac­ces­sible.

We have to tell more stories

“Aware­ness for water issues is still low unfort­u­na­tely” told Henk Ovink, first Special Envoy for Inter­na­tional Water Affairs for the Kingdom of the Nether­lands. “This is why we have to tell more stories to make people under­stand how important the water issue is.” This is exactly what Zalige Bridge does: this bridge by NEXT empha­sizes the dynamic character of water by letting people see and expe­ri­ence the chan­ging river land­scape. The atten­tion and enthu­siasm for the high water shows how we manage to live with water in the Nether­lands, not by restrai­ning it, but by giving it enough space. If you can’t beat them, join them.

Images

Video

<iframe src=“https://player.vimeo.com/video/252362798” width=“640” height=“360” frameborder=“0” webki­tal­lowfull­screen mozal­lowfull­screen allowfullscreen></iframe><!– [et_pb_line_break_holder] –><p><a href=“https://vimeo.com/252362798”>Zalige bridge by NEXT architects</a> from <a href=“https://vimeo.com/nextarchitects”>nextarchitects</a> on <a href=“https://vimeo.com”>Vimeo</a>.</p>

Cirkelbroen

“See-you-at-the-bridge“ kind of place

Cirkelbroen in Christianshavn

Celebrating pedestrians

Cirkel­broen is a pede­strian bridge compri­sing five circular bridge plat­forms span­ning Chris­ti­ans­havn Canal to connect the Chris­ti­ansbro area with Applebys Plads. For years, it has been a goal of the City of Copen­hagen to create a conti­guous board­walk along the inner water­front.

Cirkel­broen cele­brates pede­strians. It reflects the daily life and inti­macy that you find around the canal in the Chris­ti­ans­havn neigh­bour­hood, its house­boats and sailing boats, the unique life on the ramparts. Copenhagen’s harbour was once a centre of mari­time acti­vity, and Cirkel­broen is a testimony to that history. While working on the bridge, the artist  Olafur Eliasson remem­bered the fishing boats he saw as a child in Iceland. In the harbour, the boats were often moored right next to each other, and it some­times seemed that you could even cross the harbour just by walking from boat to boat.

A different perspective

The bridge is made of five circular plat­forms, and it contri­butes to a larger circle that will form a pede­strian route around Copen­hagen Harbour, where people – cycling, running, walking – can see the city from a very diffe­rent perspec­tive. As many as 5,000 people will cross this bridge each day. These people shall use Cirkel­broen as a meeting place, and that the zigzag design of the bridge will make them reduce their speed and take a break. To hesi­tate on our way is to engage in bodily thought. The desi­gner sees such intro­s­pec­tion as an essen­tial part of a vibrant city.

Designer

Studio Olafur Eliasson
Chris­ti­nen­straße 18/19, Haus 2
D — 10119 Berlin

Team

Sebas­tian Behmann, Robert Banović, Jan Bünnig

Client

Nordea-fonden

User

City of Copen­hagen

Author

Olafur Eliasson

Photograph

Anders Sune Berg

Address

Cirkel­broen
Johan Semps Gade
DK — Køben­havn K

Aerial view

Thank you, Google!

Opening

2015

Inclusion and tradition

In Denmark, there is a strong tradi­tion of focu­sing on inclu­sion, on accep­ting the other – welco­ming ideas that we have not yet had, people we have not yet met, and unpre­dic­table encoun­ters. It’s some­thing we all have to work on toge­ther, and one way of addres­sing this is in how we plan public space. Cirkel­broen will contri­bute to impro­ving the quality of life and the deve­lo­p­ment of a hospi­table and inclu­sive city.

Cirkel­broen is a gift from Nordea­fonden to the City of Copen­hagen. Nordea-fonden is a non-profit and chari­table foun­da­tion supporting acti­vi­ties that promote good living in Denmark. Cirkel­broen creates new spaces along the water­front. It brings people closer to the water and encou­rages them to slow down a little and take a break. It has already become a meeting place, a “see-you-at-the-bridge“ kind of place.

Allow it to grow

In Copen­hagen, progress has been made in thin­king about what consti­tutes quality in urban space and about the atmo­sphere of a space. Obviously, one cannot plan atmo­sphere, as it is co-produced by the people who use the space, but it is possible to nurture an atmo­sphere, to allow it to grow. As an artist, desi­gner Olafur Eliasson works with abstract and emotional quali­ties, so this is where art can play a role. Poli­ti­cians, urban plan­ners, and deve­lo­pers need to expand their toolbox by brin­ging in what Eliasson calls crea­tive reality produ­cers – artists, social scien­tists, socio­lo­gists, anthro­po­lo­gists, histo­rians, dancers, poets, envi­ron­mental acti­vists, and philo­so­phers – to rethink urban spaces.

Images

Videos

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