Plaka Bridge

Plaka Bridge

Γεφύρι της Πλάκας
The bridge in 2011
Coordinates39°27′38″N 21°01′48″E / 39.46056°N 21.03000°E / 39.46056; 21.03000
CarriedPedestrian (Footbridge)
CrossedArachthos River
LocaleArta and Ioannina, Greece
OwnerHellenic Ministry of Culture and Sports
Characteristics
MaterialStone
Total length61 metres (200 ft) or
75 metres (246 ft)
Width3.20 metres (10.5 ft)
Height21 m (68 ft 11 in)
No. of spans1
Piers in water2
History
Opened1866 (1866)
Collapsed1860, 1863, 2015
Location
Interactive map of Plaka Bridge

Plaka Bridge (Greek: Γεφύρι της Πλάκας, Gefýri tis Plákas) is a 19th-century stone one-arch bridge in Greece. It collapsed multiple times, starting in 1860, later in 1863 and most recently in 2015, it was later rebuilt in 2020 and still stands today.

It is located at the borders of Arta and Ioannina prefectures, above the waters of Arachthos River. Administratively, it belongs to the community of Plaka-Raftaneon. With its arch of 40 metres (130 ft) width and 17.61 m (57 ft 9 in) height, it is the largest one-arch bridge in Greece and the Balkans, and the third largest one-arch stone bridge in Europe. It also had two small auxiliary arches of 6 metres (20 ft) width on its two sides. It was considered "one of the most difficult, single-arch bridges to construct."

The bridge is also the starting point for rafting and canoeing on Arachthos River.