India’s longest cable-stayed structure

The Sudarshan Setu Bridge on India’s west coast, newly connecting the holy island of Beyt Dwarka to the mainland for two million pilgrims each year, is India’s longest cable-stayed structure. The cable-supported structure and the approaches at both ends are supported by mageba bridge bearings.

Before this iconic structure was inaugurated by Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi on 25th February 2024, the millions of pilgrims that visited the Krishna temples on Beyt Dwarka island had to make the crossing from the mainland by boat. Thankfully, their pilgrimage is now somewhat easier, with a four-lane road bridge connecting the island to the mainland for the first time. The bridge has a total length of 2,320 m, with a cable-stayed structure of length 900 m – India’s longest. It also has the country’s longest individual cable-stayed span, with a length of 500 m.  

The cable-supported structure and the approaches at both ends are supported by mageba bearings:

  • 116 RESTON®POT bearings, designed to support vertical loads of up to 22,000 kN and resist horizontal forces of up to 8500 kN, and 

  • eight LASTO®BLOCK elastomeric bearings arranged in four pairs – each bearing of size 1210 x 1210 x 479 mm, with each pair designed to carry a vertical load of 17,000 kN and resist horizontal forces of 3300 kN.

The required expansion joints were also manufactured by mageba:

Like many pilgrims before them, the bearings and expansion joints had a long journey across India, all the way from mageba’s factory in Kolkata – and now they will help make the last few kilometres of the journey much easier for all future pilgrims.

Bridge designer: Wiecon Civil & Structural Consulting Engineers and ASC Infratech Pvt. Ltd.
Owner: Ministry of Road Transport & Highways, Government of India
Contractor: S.P. Singla Constructions Pvt. Ltd.

The newly constructed Sudarshan Setu Bridge on India’s west coast is the country’s longest cable-stayed structure and has a main span of length 500 m

Lifting a six-gap TENSA®MODULAR expansion joint into position at one end of the 900m-long cable-stayed structure

Installation of a six-gap TENSA® MODULAR expansion joint on the Sudarshan Setu Bridge which connects the island of Beyt Dwarka to the mainland for the first time

The TENSA®MODULAR expansion joints were fabricated at mageba’s Indian production facility in Kolkata

The RESTON®POT bridge bearings were also produced at mageba’s factory in Kolkata