, the world's widest cable-stayed bridge. •
Arthur Ravenel Jr. Bridge, crosses the
Cooper River in
Charleston, South Carolina. It opened in 2005 to replace the
John P. Grace Memorial Bridge and the
Silas N. Pearman Bridge which were nearing the end of their useful lives. At the time of its opening it was the longest cable-stayed bridge span in the Western Hemisphere. •
Aswan Bridge, crossing over the
Nile river, located in the city of
Aswan, Egypt. It was built by the Holding Company for Roads, Bridges and Land Transport Projects. •
Bandra-Worli Sealink - Cable stayed Bridge in Mumbai (also known as Bombay). •
Brooklyn Bridge, famous as a suspension bridge, also has cable stays. •
Centennial Bridge, a six-lane vehicular bridge that crosses the
Panama Canal with a total length of . •
Changtai Yangtze River Bridge, connecting the cities of Changzhou and Taizhou across the Yangtze River in China, opened in 2025. It has the world's longest span, at meters •
Clark Bridge, named after explorer
William Clark, carries U.S. 67 between Illinois and Missouri. Opened in 1994, the 108-foot-wide bridge (33 m) replaced the
old Clark Bridge, a truss bridge built in 1928 which was only 20 feet (6.1 m) wide. The bridge is sometimes referred to as the
Super Bridge as its construction process was documented in the 1997
NOVA episode Super Bridge, which highlighted the challenges of building the bridge, especially during the
Great Flood of 1993. Total length is 4,620 feet (1,408 m) with a longest span of 756 feet (230 m). , in
Rotterdam,
Netherlands •
Erasmus Bridge crosses the
Nieuwe Maas in
Rotterdam,
Netherlands. The southern span of the bridge has an bascule bridge for ships that cannot pass under the bridge. The bascule bridge is the largest and heaviest in West Europe and has the largest panel of its type in the world. , with the
Galata Tower at the left end of the frame,
Istanbul,
Turkey •
Golden Horn Metro Bridge, connects the old peninsula of
Istanbul with the
Galata district and is the first cable-stayed bridge in
Turkey. • The
Gordie Howe International Bridge currently under construction, connecting
Detroit, Michigan with
Windsor, Ontario, will have two inverted "Y" shaped towers built on the banks of the
Detroit River, six-lanes for automotive traffic, and a cycle and walking path. It will be long. Once completed in 2025, it will have the longest main span of any cable-stayed bridge in North America at . •
Jiaxing-Shaoxing Sea Bridge,
Zhejiang Province, China. The bridge is an eight-lane structure that spans across
Hangzhou Bay, connecting
Jiaxing and
Shaoxing, two cities of Zhejiang province. It was opened on 23 July 2013 and is currently the longest cable-stayed bridge in the world. •
John James Audubon Bridge (Mississippi River): The longest cable-stayed bridge in the Western Hemisphere, crossing the Mississippi River between
New Roads, Louisiana and
St. Francisville, Louisiana. •
Journalist Phelippe Daou Bridge crosses the
Rio Negro in
Amazonas state. It was opened on 24 October 2011 and is currently the fourth longest bridge in
Brazil, at with a cable-stayed span of . •
Kap Shui Mun Bridge: Road-rail cable-stayed bridge with longest span when opened •
Kosciuszko Bridge: This connects the boroughs of Brooklyn and Queens in New York City, replacing a truss bridge of the same name. The first cable-stayed span (temporarily carrying three lanes in each direction) opened to traffic in April 2017. A second, nearly identical span opened on 29 August 2019. over the
Trinity River in
Dallas,
Texas, U.S. (2012) •
Margaret Hunt Hill Bridge in
Dallas,
Texas, U.S., which opened in 2012 and spans the
Trinity River. In 2012, the bridge received an Outstanding Civil Engineering Achievement Award from the Texas section of the
American Society of Civil Engineers. The bridge also received a 2012 European Convention for Constructional Steelwork Award For
Steel Bridges. •
Millau Viaduct, the bridge with the tallest piers in the world: tall and roadway high, spanning the river
Tarn in France. With a total length of and seven towers, it also has the longest cable-stayed suspended deck in the world. (Bridge of the Slovak National Uprising) – the world's longest cable-stayed bridge to have one pylon and one cable-stayed plane (Bratislava, Slovakia, 1967–1972) •
Most SNP (Nový most), the world's longest cable-stayed bridge in category with one pylon and with one cable-stayed plane, spanning the
Danube in
Bratislava,
Slovakia. The main span is , total length . The only member of
World Federation of Great Towers that is primarily used as a bridge. It houses a flying-saucer restaurant at the top of pylon tall. •
Octavio Frias de Oliveira bridge crosses the
Pinheiros River in
São Paulo, 2008. It has a -high pylon under which two stayed roads cross each other turning 90° to the opposite bank of the river. •
Oresund Bridge, a combined two-track rail and four-lane road bridge with a main span of and a total length of , crossing the
Öresund between
Malmö, Sweden, and the
Danish Capital Region. connects the southeastern Croatian exclave to the rest of the country. •
Pelješac Bridge,
Dubrovnik-Neretva County, Croatia. It is a long and tall road bridge that connects the southeastern
semi-exclave to the rest of the country, spanning the sea channel between
Komarna and
Pelješac. •
Penobscot Narrows Bridge and Observatory, a road bridge with an observatory at the top of one of the towers, and a span of . •
Ponte Morandi, part of which collapsed during a rainstorm on 14 August 2018 •
Pont de Normandie, crosses the
Seine in
Normandy, France (1988–1995) – briefly the world's longest cable-stayed bridge. •
Queensferry Crossing (formerly the Forth Replacement Crossing) is a road bridge in Scotland. It is built alongside the existing, suspension,
Forth Road Bridge across the
Firth of Forth and upon completion in 2017 became the longest triple-tower cable-stayed bridge in the world at 2700m. •
Pont de Brotonne, first modern cable-stayed bridge of that type, opened to traffic in 1977. •
Rande Bridge in Spain near Vigo is the highway cable-stayed bridge with the longest and slenderest span in the world at the time of construction (1973–1977). Three long spans of + + . Pylons in concrete, girder in steel. •
Rio-Antirio bridge crosses the
Gulf of Corinth near
Patras, Greece. At a total length of and four towers, it has the second longest cable-stayed suspended deck ( long) in the world, with only the deck of the Millau Viaduct in southern France being longer at . However, as the latter is also supported by bearings at the pylons apart from cable stays, the Rio–Antirrio bridge deck might be considered the longest cable-stayed fully suspended deck in the world. bridge that crosses the
Gulf of Corinth near
Patras, linking the town of
Rio on the
Peloponnese peninsula to
Antirrio on mainland
Greece by road. •
Rod El Farag Axis Bridge, crosses the
Nile River in
Cairo,
Egypt. With a width of 67.3 meters, the bridge holds the
Guinness World Record for the world's widest cable-stayed bridge. •
Russky Bridge, the cable-stayed bridge with the world's second longest span, at meters.
Vladivostok,
Russia. , at , is the longest cable-stayed bridge in
Brazil. •
Suez Canal Bridge, located in
El Qantara, Egypt. Crossing the
Suez Canal, the bridge links the continents of
Africa and
Asia. •
Sunshine Skyway Bridge, in the US State of
Florida located near
Tampa opened in 1987. The bridge replaced the original
cantilever bridges which were the site of a maritime incident. •
Surgut Bridge, the longest single-pylon cable-stayed bridge in the world, crossing the
Ob River in
Siberia,
Russia. •
Sutong Yangtze River Bridge in eastern China has the second longest cable-stayed bridge span at . Completed in 2008, the Sutong Bridge is
one of over 40 cable-stayed bridges built over the Yangtze since 1995. • The
Tappan Zee Bridge, the replacement for the
original bridge, is a
twin-deck cable-stayed bridge opened in 2017 and 2018, and is both the southernmost
Hudson River-crossing bridge entirely within New York State, and the first cable-stayed bridge in North America to match Boston's Zakim Bridge (see below) overall road-deck width figure of , spanning eight lanes. •
Tilikum Crossing in
Portland, Oregon, is the first major bridge in the U.S. that was designed to allow access to transit vehicles, cyclists and pedestrians but not cars. Completed in 2015, the bridge is and spans across the
Willamette River to connect the
South Waterfront and
Central Eastside districts. •
Ting Kau Bridge, the world's first major four-span (three towers) cable-stayed bridge, forming part of the road network connecting
Hong Kong International Airport to other parts of
Hong Kong. •
Varina-Enon Bridge, Carries I-295 across the James River between Henrico and Chesterfield Counties in Virginia. Varina-Enon Bridge features the world's first use of precast concrete delta frames for construction of its cable-stayed main span. It is an instrumental part of the Peregrine Falcon program overseen by the
Virginia Department of Transportation. •
Vasco da Gama Bridge in
Lisbon, Portugal is the longest bridge in Europe, with a total length of , including for the main bridge, in viaducts and in extension roads. • The
Leonard P. Zakim Bunker Hill Memorial Bridge in downtown
Boston, Massachusetts spanning the
Charles River is the cable-stayed bridge with the world's widest roadbed for such a bridge, at some , encompassing ten lanes of traffic. It is also the first cable-stayed bridge with an asymmetrical deck design, with
two of the 10 lanes cantilevered from the south side of the main bridge deck. • The
Kazungula Bridge is a road and rail bridge over the
Zambezi river between the countries of
Zambia and
Botswana (3,028 feet). •
Zárate–Brazo Largo Bridges over the Paraná Guazú and Paraná de las Palmas Rivers in
Argentina (1972–1976) are the first two road and railway long-span cable-stayed
steel bridges in the world. Spans: + + . •
Vidyasagar Setu, also known as the Second Hooghly Bridge, over the
Hooghly river, happens to be the first and longest such bridge in India and one of the longest in Asia. It connects the twin cities of
Howrah and
Kolkata. ==See also==