Puente Santa Rosa

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St. Rose Bridge

Puente Santa Rosa
Coordinates12°02′29″S 77°02′02″W / 12.04125°S 77.034°W / -12.04125; -77.034
CrossesRímac river
BeginsTacna Avenue
EndsJirón Virú[1]
Other name(s)Tacna Bridge
Named forRose of Lima
History
ArchitectErnesto Aramburú [es]
Inaugurated30 August 1960
Location
Map

St. Rose Bridge (Spanish: Puente Santa Rosa) is one of the main bridges located in the historic centre of Lima, Peru. It connects Lima with Rímac District and follows the path of Tacna Avenue. It is named after the Sanctuary of Saint Rose of Lima, located next to its southern entrance.

History[edit]

The bridge was preceded by the nearby "la Puente de Palo"[2][3][4] (lit. trans. the stick-bridge), a rudimentary wooden bridge that still existed by 1962[5] built by the Viceroy Marquis of Cañete to connect what was then the neighbourhood of San Lázaro with the city of Lima.[6] The construction was carried out at the request of Conquistador Jerónimo de Aliaga [es], with the finished product being a narrow bridge, through which only one person could pass at a time.[7] It was the first "firm" bridge in the city (despite the fact that it had replaced a brick bridge destroyed by flooding in 1607),[8] and connected the neighbourhood of Monserrat through its main square to the other side of the river.[7]

The new bridge was formally inaugurated on August 30, 1960. During the opening ceremony, speeches were given by Héctor García Ribeyro, then mayor of Lima, and Manuel Prado Ugarteche, then president of Peru who was accompanied by First Lady Clorinda Málaga, with whom he travelled from one side to the other in his car once the ceremony had concluded.[9] Also present in the ceremony were the Archbishop of Lima, Juan Landázuri Ricketts, and auxiliary bishop José Antonio Dammert Bellido.[1] The architect in charge of the project was Ernesto Aramburú Menchaca [es].[9]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b García, Miguel (2022-01-18). "Esta es la historia de los principales puentes de Lima que cruzan el 'río hablador'". El Comercio.
  2. ^ Contreras, Manuel (2019-09-04). "Rímac: un tour esencial por el distrito que dio vida a 'La flor de la canela' de Chabuca Granda". El Comercio.
  3. ^ Gamarra Galindo, Marco (2011-08-10). "La iglesia Santa Rosa y la ampliación de la Avenida Tacna". Blog PUCP.
  4. ^ Cueto, Alonso (2022-04-29). "Lima en sus calles". El Comercio.
  5. ^ Bühler, Dirk (2009). "La construcción de puentes en ciudades virreinales y su impacto en la estructura social y urbana". Boletín de Monumentos Históricos (16).
  6. ^ de Lizárraga, Reginaldo (1916). "LVIII: Del valle de Cañete". Descripción colonial (in Spanish). Vol. 1. Buenos Aires: Librería La Facultad, de Juan Roldán.
  7. ^ a b Angulo, Domingo (1935). Monografías históricas sobre la ciudad de Lima (in Spanish). Vol. 2. Concejo Provincial de Lima. pp. 91, 93, 143.
  8. ^ Doering, Juan Günther; Lohmann Villena, Guillermo (1992). Lima (in Spanish). Editorial MAPFRE. p. 122.
  9. ^ a b García, Miguel (2022-08-30). "Santa Rosa de Lima: la historia del estreno del puente al final de la Av. Tacna que lleva su nombre". El Comercio.