Sibrevcomovsky Bridge

The Sibrevcomovsky Bridge (Russian: Сибревкомовский мост, Sibrevcomovsky Most) is a pedestrian bridge over the Ippodromskya Street, connecting the Tsentralny and Oktyabrsky districts of Novosibirsk, Russia. It was opened on November 7, 1926. Architect: M. A. Ulianinsky. Previously, it was a road bridge.[1][2].

Sibrevcomovsky Bridge
CrossesIppodromskaya Street (previously Kamenka River)
LocaleNovosibirsk, Russia
History
Opened1926

Initially, it crossed the Kamenka River, but then the river was enclosed in a tunnel.[2]

Bridge name

The bridge is named after Sibrevcom Street.[3].

History

The Sibrevcomovsky Bridge was constructed from May 1925 to November 1926.[2]

Until the 1960s, it was a dangerous place. Frequent robberies occurred on the bridge.[2]

In the 1980s, the bridge became a pedestrian walkway.[2]

gollark: They wouldn't be happy to have them be thingied with magnets either. This is irrelevant.
gollark: Do racks have wheels? If so, just cut the power (and UPSes) and drag them out.
gollark: But then you're damaging precious GPUs. You should steal them.
gollark: Cryptomining farms probably boot off SSDs and don't have much more storage than that, in any case.
gollark: You can't actually do anything very bad to recent computers just by waving weak magnets around. I don't know if you *have* been able to ever since magnetic tapes stopped being a popular thing.

References

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