The first bridge in the city was the Puente de Barcas, which was replaced in 1852 by the current Puente de Triana, officially called the
Isabel II Bridge. On March 15, 1880, a railway bridge called Alfonso XII was inaugurated. In order to solve the water problem, in 1882 the
Seville City Council gave a 99-year concession to the
Seville Water Works Company to supply water to the people of Seville. Among the infrastructures created by this company was an aqueduct over the Guadalquivir at the
Plaza de Chapina that was inaugurated on April 23, 1898. This structure also allowed pedestrian passage and was known as Pasadera or Water Walkway. In 1857 Seville had 112,529 registered inhabitants and in 1910 it reached 158,287 inhabitants. Of those residents, 30,000 lived on the western bank of the river, where the
Triana neighborhood was located, and the city only had three bridges. In 1917, the engineer Antonio Ibarra Miró, from the Provincial Headquarters of Public Works of Seville, carried out a study to choose its location. The decision was made to do so in front of the Salón Cristina building, near the San Telmo Palace, because many buildings from the 1929 Ibero-American Exhibition would be located south of the center and it was thought that the opposite bank could be urbanized in the future. In this study, a highway was also proposed that would run along the current República Argentina Avenue and I know that it would extend to the neighborhood of La Pañoleta, in Camas. That highway would be the base of a route to Coria del Río, Huelva and Extremadura. The Public Works Headquarters of Seville called a public tender in which the French company Schneider y Cía submitted a bridge with metal sections that would cost 11 million pesetas, and the Spanish company Compañía de Construcciones Hidráulicas y Civiles, with a bridge that It cost 8 million. The latter was directed by the engineer José Eugenio Ribera. The General Directorate of Public Works chose the Ribera project. The General Directorate reduced the width of the bridge from 20 to 15 meters and eliminated many decorations that, if placed, should have been paid for by the City Council. The budget of the bridge, after this, became 5,821,318 pesetas. The structural arrangement of the lateral arches had been used by the French engineer Paul Séjourné in his ashlar arches in Luxembourg and Toulouse. This type of arches in the bridge had already been used by Ribera in 1909 on the Queen Victoria Bridge over the Manzanares River in Madrid. The advantages of this type of arch led to it being considered a standard arch for arch bridges. of reinforced concrete for roads in 1924. The central drawable section was designed and assembled by the Barcelona company La Maquinista Terrestre y Marítima. The bridge would be drawable to facilitate access for ships to the Arenal docks. Before its construction, Alfonso XIII said he was concerned that the bridge would block the view of the Torre del Oro from the south of the city. After this comment, the bridge's grade was lowered three meters. This was possible because the Ministry of Development was carrying out at that time the cutting of the Vega de Triana in the Guadalquivir, and this implied that the arm of the river that passed through Seville would remain as a basin not subject to the river's floods. Ribera had designed the bridge in 1920, in a period more prone to "modernist fantasies", when he collaborated with the architects Gustavo and Roberto Fernández Balbuena. However, when work was going to begin, these same architects considered that this design was out of fashion and the bridge was executed with much simpler lines. In 1920 there was an attempt to disguise the fact that it was a concrete bridge, but when the bridge was inaugurated in 1931, Ribera himself said that "The beauty of a bridge is obtained by the silhouette of its shapes and the proportions of its elements. Its concrete walls should not be hidden [...] We are in an era of constructive sincerity." For construction, Ribera had the help of engineers
Eduardo Torroja, José Entrecanales and Manuel Távora Barrera. The latter had demonstrated its expertise in reinforced concrete works with the loading dock for the Cala mines made for the Port of Seville in
San Juan de Aznalfarache. == Description ==