By Justin Mays:
Turkey celebrated another infrastructure feat in March with the inauguration of the 1915 Canakkale Bridge. This is the longest middle-span suspension bridge worldwide with a soan of 2,023 meters. It was built through the ingenuity of 670 engineers and 5000 workers to bring it to fruition. The design, construction quality, and technical knowledge it took to build mirrors are renowned architects who worked together on this project.
Areas covered by Canakkale
Bridge
Linking Europe and Asia, the bridge spans the Dardanelles, a strait in the Çanakkale province between the Aegean Sea to the south and the Sea of Marmara to the north. Speaking at the bridge opening, President Erdogan noted that a new period is starting in which all transportation activities, whether by land, sea, rail, or air, will pass through Turkey.
Infrastructure Developments in
Turkey
Infrastructure development has seen a robust period in the last couple of decades in Turkey, with many new projects making ease of transport and travel a priority. Some exceptional projects include the new road linking Istanbul to Izmir, which shaves hours off the trip between the two cities, and fast-speed intercity and inner-city trains that make travel accessible for people to move around.
Global Recognition of Turkey’s
Developments
Areas with poor infrastructure
are also recipients of positive developments, with Turkey prioritizing local
connectivity in inner Anatolia through dozens of tunnels and hundreds of
kilometers of highways and bridges. The World Economic Forum has recognized
Turkey in recent Global Competitiveness Reports with high rankings for
transportation infrastructure and excellent road connectivity.