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旧金山金门大桥
The orange towers of the Golden Gate
Bridge – probably the most beautiful, certainly the most
photographed bridge in the world – are visible from almost
every point of elevation in San Francisco. The only cleft in
Northern California's 600-mile continental wall, for years
this mile-wide strait was considered unbridgeable. As much an
architectural as an engineering feat, the Golden Gate took
only 52 months to design and build, and was opened in 1937.
Designed by Joseph Strauss, it was the first really massive
suspension bridge, with a span of 4200ft, and until 1959
ranked as the world's longest. It connects the city at its
northwesterly point on the peninsula to Marin County and
Northern California, rendering the hitherto essential ferry
crossing redundant, and was designed to withstand winds of up
to a hundred miles an hour and to swing as much as 27ft.
Handsome on a clear day, the bridge takes on an eerie quality
when the thick white fogs pour in and hide it almost
completely.
You can either drive or walk across.
The drive is the more thrilling of the two options as you race
under the bridge's towers, but the half-hour walk across it
really gives you time to take in its enormous size and absorb
the views of the city behind you and the headlands of Northern
California straight ahead. Pause at the midway point and
consider the seven or so suicides a month who choose this
spot, 260ft up, as their jumping-off spot. Monitors of such
events speculate that victims always face the city before they
leap. In 1995, when the suicide toll from the bridge had
reached almost 1000, police kept the figures quiet to avoid a
rush of would-be suicides going for the dubious distinction of
being the thousandth person to leap.
Perhaps the best-loved symbol of San
Francisco, in 1987 the Golden Gate proved an auspicious place
for a sunrise party when crowds gathered to celebrate its
fiftieth anniversary. Some quarter of a million people turned
up (a third of the city's entire population); the winds were
strong and the huge numbers caused the bridge to buckle, but
fortunately not to break.
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