Pedestrian Bridge
Austin, TX, USA
Miró Rivera Architects, USA
Miró Rivera Architects, USA
Photos: Paul Finkel
Project's description on ARCHDAILY [by the architect]:
"Located on a densely vegetated site in Lake Austin, the pedestrian 
bridge connects the main house on the property with a newly constructed 
guest house. With a design inspired by the reeds and other native 
vegetation that cover the shores of the lake, the bridge is a light and 
maintenance-free structure that is well-integrated within its wetland 
setting. The bars/reeds intertwine at the abutments and “grow” over the 
bridge, camouflaging it and transforming the bridge into a symbiotic, 
almost invisible link. The bridge is composed of three elements:
Superstructure: The arch structure spans 100 feet with a main span of 80
 feet. It is composed of five nested five-inch diameter pipes that 
diverge gracefully between the spring-point of the main span and the 
abutment at the beginning of the bridge.
Decking and Railing: The pipes support 1/2” diameter bars which become 
both decking and guardrail via a simple field bend from horizontal to 
vertical. The irregular length and close spacing of the bars recall the 
native reeds of the site, and the thin profile of the superstructure is 
made thinner when viewed through the visual veil of the reeds. The 
handrail consists of a rope secured with steel wire rings to a 1×1 
horizontal tube welded to the vertical bars.
Abutment: Native stone slabs are layered vertically to create the ramps 
at the abutments.  Deep raked joints recreate the rhythm of the steel 
bars of the deck and railings. To further incorporate the bridge with 
its natural setting, the steel is left unfinished to weather, just like 
the rope handrail and the stone ramps."
 - Miró Rivera Architects
  









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