This is a case of where the "before" definitely looks better than the "after."
Branko's Bridge is the second-largest bridge in Belgrade across the Sava River, connecting the city center with New Belgrade, visible in the background of the second photo. (New Belgrade did not exist until around 1965.) The bridge was built in 1957 to replace the former King Alexander I bridge that was opened on December 16th, 1934, and blown up in 1941. The bridge actually uses lower parts of the former bridge's pylons for its two secondary spans. It is crossed by nearly 90,000 vehicles daily, and traffic jams are frequent. Its official name during communist rule was " Brotherhood and Unity Bridge," but that name never caught on. It isn't certain whether the bridge was named afterBranko Radičević, a Serbian Romantic poet, or after another writer, Branko Ćopić, who committed a suicide by jumping from the bridge in 1984. (Such occurrences or attempts are quite frequent, actually.)
Branko's Bridge is the second-largest bridge in Belgrade across the Sava River, connecting the city center with New Belgrade, visible in the background of the second photo. (New Belgrade did not exist until around 1965.) The bridge was built in 1957 to replace the former King Alexander I bridge that was opened on December 16th, 1934, and blown up in 1941. The bridge actually uses lower parts of the former bridge's pylons for its two secondary spans. It is crossed by nearly 90,000 vehicles daily, and traffic jams are frequent. Its official name during communist rule was " Brotherhood and Unity Bridge," but that name never caught on. It isn't certain whether the bridge was named afterBranko Radičević, a Serbian Romantic poet, or after another writer, Branko Ćopić, who committed a suicide by jumping from the bridge in 1984. (Such occurrences or attempts are quite frequent, actually.)
This post is dedicated to Marie at Vintage Postcards! Check out her blog at: http://www.cpaphilblog.com/