Golden Gate Bridge History: One of the 7 Engineering Wonders of the World. (2024)

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Golden Gate Bridge History: One of the 7 Engineering Wonders of the World. (1)

ByKaren

Updated June 1, 2023.

The story of the bridge that couldn't be built.

When the Golden Gate Bridge was finished in 1937, it was the longest and tallest suspension bridge in the world.

It was considered an architectural marvel due to the difficulty of putting a bridge across such a large and turbulent space.

The bridge spans the narrow, rocky opening that leads from the Pacific Ocean into San Francisco Bay, connecting the city of San Francisco with Marin County to the north, and carrying Highways 1 and 101 across the gap.

Before there was a bridge...

Golden Gate Bridge History: One of the 7 Engineering Wonders of the World. (2)San Francisco Bay in 1876

The first Europeans to sail past the entrance to the bay wereSir Francis Drakeand his crew of theGolden Hind. They landed north of the bay, near Point Reyes up the coast, on June 17, 1579.

The Spanish spent over 200 years sailing up and down the coast without realizing there was a huge bay nearby; it's not obvious from the sea because there's a long entry channel before the actual opening into the bay.

Spanish explorerJuan de Ayalawas the first European to enter San Francisco Bay. He moored his ship near Angel Island in 1775, explored the bay, and gave some of the current names to various places: Alcatraz island, Angel Island, Point Reyes, and the Farallon Islands.

Building the Bridge

The Golden Gate Bridge is such a beautiful work of art, but it could have looked very different!

The Art Deco structure standing today was not the original plan.

The first design featured gawky cantilevers, not the graceful suspension bridge we have now. And the Navy was pushing for the bumble bee look, black and gold stripes, to make the bridge more visible to ships!

Golden Gate Bridge History: One of the 7 Engineering Wonders of the World. (3)Yes, a close call.

A rocky start...

After the Gold Rush, when the population of San Francisco was booming, the idea of a bridge across to Marin County began to percolate.

Golden Gate Bridge History: One of the 7 Engineering Wonders of the World. (4)The Golden Gate, 1891

There was opposition from so many sources, it's in some ways surprising that the bridge was ever built.

Not only was it an extremely challenging engineering feat, fighting the deep waters, strong currents and buffeting winds (which you can still experience walking across), many objected to the cost, or the appearance, or raised military security issues, and others worried it would compete with the ferry business.

In the end, the Bank of America (San Francisco's home-grown bank) agreed to finance it, and an attractive suspension-style form was approved.

The Golden Gate Bridge was voted one of theseven engineering wonders of the 20th Century, by the American Society of Civil Engineers in 1994.

Architecture of the bridge

The 1800's were years of great innovation and advances in the art and science of bridge building. Use of steel and concrete opened up all sorts of new possibilities in design, and lots of experimentation went into the construction of hundreds of new bridges.

As early as 1820, discussions began about the possibility of building a bridge across the Golden Gate (the name given the opening in 1846 by John Fremont, inspired by the Golden Horn near Istanbul).

Modern design, 1933 style

Joseph Strauss, an engineer from Chicago, was put in charge of the project to build the bridge. His experience was not in suspension bridges and his original design for San Francisco was an ungainly, cantilevered design in three sections.

Golden Gate Bridge History: One of the 7 Engineering Wonders of the World. (5)Joseph Strauss

Strauss was given credit for designing the bridge, but the actual engineer,Charles Alton Ellis, was only officially recognized just a few years ago (but only Strauss got a statue near the Welcome Center).

Thecurrent designwas based on an approach developed by the engineer who designed the Manhattan Bridge in NYC, and later the unfortunate Tacoma Narrows Bridge,Leon Moisseiff.

Moisseiff's design involved aflexible bridge deckto deal with the strong winds passing through the gate. The roadway flexes a bit when the winds blow hard, and the strain is transferred to the towers by the thick cables.

The smaller cables attached to the roadway at frequent intervals hang from the twomain cables,holding up the deck of the bridge and making it a suspension bridge.

Each cable is made up of over 27,000 strands of wire and holds up to 61,000 tons of bridge and vehicles. The cables are about 36 inches (0.9 meters) in diameter. There are about 80,000milesof cable in the two main cables.

Golden Gate Bridge History: One of the 7 Engineering Wonders of the World. (6)Cross Section of Main Cable

The ends of the main cables are anchored in cement, attached to the bedrock.

The First Hardhats in America

The chief engineer, Joseph Strauss, placed a high emphasis on safety.

The workers had a movable net under the bridge, which greatly reduced the mortality rate typical of large projects like this. Even so, eleven men fell to their deaths when a platform they were standing on fell through the safety net.

The net did save 19 men when they fell during construction. They men who survived the fall into the net called themselves the Halfway to Hell Club.

In addition to the safety net, all workers were required to wear hard hats, the first time this was required on an American construction project.

Golden Gate Bridge History: One of the 7 Engineering Wonders of the World. (7)Original Bridge Hardhat

Golden Gate Bridge History: One of the 7 Engineering Wonders of the World. (8)Current Hardhat

The day the bridge opened, onMay 27, 1937, the public was allowed to stroll across, and 200,000 people stood on the bridge deck.

Golden Gate Bridge History: One of the 7 Engineering Wonders of the World. (9)Opening Day in 1937

Near Disaster...

After the Golden Gate was completed in 1937, Moisseiff designed another long, suspension bridge to span Puget Sound, between Seattle and Tacoma, which opened in July, 1940: theTacoma Narrows Bridge.

Moisseiff used a design for the new bridge that was very similar to that of the Golden Gate Bridge, and based on the same principles as his other suspension bridges.

The suspension bridge in Washington was not as long as the Golden Gate, but much narrower (two lanes vs six lanes), and the design included a less robust bracing of the bridge deck.

Moisseiff's theory was that long bridges would resist wind better and could tolerate more flexibility, but the extreme flexibility resulted in the collapse of the Tacoma Narrows Bridge only four months after it was finished.

The Tacoma Narrows Bridge had major problems with vertical undulation even before it was finished, earning it the nickname,Galloping Gertie; riding its waves even became a tourist attraction.

The collapse was dramatic; one day in November, 1940, it changed from undulation to twisting, which became so extreme that the bridge was torn apart and fell into the water.

Video of Tacoma Narrows Bridge collapse

Golden Gate Bridge Response

Because of the collapse, engineers quickly added steel trusses for stronger bracing to the bottom of the road deck on the Golden Gate Bridge, which had also been displaying some excessive up and down motion, though much milder.

Golden Gate Bridge History: One of the 7 Engineering Wonders of the World. (10)

The Golden Gate Bridge looks so solid, and so big, it's hard to imagine it moving much. But that's what a suspension bridge does.

The Golden Gate is designed to move up and down (10 feet, or 3 meters), and side-to-side (21 feet, or 6.4 meters, each way). What makes it move? Traffic weight and wind. When the winds are blowing hard, you can feel some movement if you're walking across.

This flexible design (with added trusses) has worked well for the Golden Gate. It's been very stable and hasn't developed problems over its 70 year history, in spite of having had over 2 billion vehicles drive across it!

On its50th anniversaryin 1987, 300,000 people crowded onto the roadway and the weight from all the bodies flattened it, causing a sag of about 7 feet in the center. Partly for that reason, this wasn't repeated on its 75th anniversary in 2012.

It held up OK with all the extra weight and came to only 40% of it's strain limit, but the actual bending of the bridge made the engineers nervous. However, it even passed unharmed through the 1989 earthquake, so the design, with its later improvements, has proved a good one.

The current opinion of the bridge engineers is that the bridge won't fall when The Big One hits the Bay Area, i.e., the expected quake of a magnitude of 8.0 on the Richter Scale. They do expect it to be out of commission for a long period, however, and have gotten approval to strengthen it further so the bridge will be back in use fairly quickly. Hopefully it won't hit until they're done...in 2024!

Where are the best places to view the bridge?

I've mapped out the favorite photo-op locations for the Golden Gate Bridge, plus tips on how to get there, and where to park. See best Golden Gate Bridge views.

Where to Park at the bridge

It's easy to park at the Golden Gate Bridge! Very unusual for a San Francisco attraction. See where the locals park for free.

For information on visiting the bridge, getting to the bridge and walking the bridge see Golden Gate Bridge.

Want to ride across it? See my page on the best ways to bike the bridge.

More to explore...

SF Bay Cruises

Pier 39

Alcatraz

Chinatown

Golden Gate Bridge History: One of the 7 Engineering Wonders of the World. (2024)

FAQs

Is the Golden Gate Bridge a 7 Wonder of the World? ›

Once called “the bridge that couldn't be built,” today the Golden Gate Bridge is one the seven wonders of the modern world. This magnificent span, perhaps San Francisco's most famous landmark, opened in 1937 after a four-year struggle against relentless winds, fog, rock and treacherous tides.

Why is the Golden Gate Bridge considered an engineering marvel? ›

The Golden Gate Bridge is considered to be an engineering wonder, created in 4 years due to the excellent human vision, persistence, and technical expertise. The weight of the bridge, when built, was 894,500 tons, length 8,981 feet, width 90 feet, and water clearance 220 feet.

What is the Golden Gate Bridge brief history? ›

When constructed in 1937, it set the world record for the longest bridge span, the distance between supports (4,200 ft, 1,280 m) and also the tallest towers. Total length of Bridge including approaches from abutment to abutment: 1.7 miles = 8,981 ft = 2,737 m.

Who engineered the Golden Gate Bridge? ›

From poet to draftsman to bridge engineer, Joseph Baermann Strauss was Chief Engineer and Architect of the Golden Gate Bridge and had an extraordinary influence on its conception, design, and construction.

What is the only remaining 7 wonder of the world? ›

The Great Pyramid. The Great Pyramid, the largest of the Pyramids of Giza, is the only Great Wonder still standing. It was build more than 4,000 years ago.

What is the missing 8th wonder of the world? ›

The Amber Room, often referred to as the “Eighth Wonder of the World”, was one of Russia's most priceless works of art until it was looted by Nazi Germany and lost after the conclusion of WW II.

Why is the Golden Gate Bridge so strong? ›

The forces carried down through the steel towers are resisted by the strength of the concrete foundations, which extend into bedrock. The pulling or tension forces in the cables are resisted by the massive concrete anchorages at both ends of the Bridge, and those anchorages are also embedded in bedrock.

What type of engineers designed the Golden Gate Bridge? ›

The Golden Gate Bridge was designed by Joseph Strauss (Chief Engineer) and his task group of extraordinarily experienced design and consulting engineers: Charles Ellis, Leon Moisseiff, Othmar Ammann, and Charles Derleth Jr., together with the geologist Andrew C. Lawson.

Was the Golden Gate Bridge originally gold? ›

Some visitors wonder why the bridge isn't gold, like made from actual gold (or at least gold painted). Others, like me, have long mistaken it for red. The color is actually called 'international orange' - a variation on the color used now for many astronaut jumpsuits. It was a beautiful accident.

How deep is the water under the Golden Gate Bridge? ›

The deepest part of the bay is under and out of the Golden Gate Bridge, at 372 ft (113 m). In the late 1990s, a 12-year harbor-deepening project for the Port of Oakland began; it was largely completed by September 2009.

What was the original name of the Golden Gate Bridge? ›

Fremont gazed at the narrow strait that separates the Bay for the Pacific Ocean, and said “it is a golden gate to trade with the Orient.” The name first appeared in his Geographical Memoir, submitted to the U.S. Senate on June 5, 1848, when he wrote, “to this Gate I gave the name of “Chrysopylae” or “Golden Gate” for ...

Who tried to sell the Golden Gate Bridge? ›

Parker's exploits gave rise to phrases such as "and if you believe that, I have a bridge to sell you", to insinuate that someone is gullible. "The Man Who Sold New York", a song about George C. Parker written by Boo Hewerdine and Findlay Napier, appears on Napier's 2013 album VIP: Very Interesting Persons. George C.

Who owns the Golden Gate Bridge? ›

The Golden Gate Bridge, Highway and Transportation District is a special district of the State of California which operates and maintains the Golden Gate Bridge and two unified public transit systems – Golden Gate Transit and Golden Gate Ferry – connecting the counties of Marin, Sonoma, San Francisco, and Contra Costa.

Who opposed the Golden Gate Bridge? ›

The U.S. War Department, which owned the land on both shores of the Gate, was equally opposed to the bridge, fearing construction would interfere with military operations and that, once completed, the bridge might be blown up by enemies and obstruct the harbor.

When was Golden Gate Bridge 7 Wonders of the World? ›

Seven Wonders of the Modern World
RankWonderDate finished
4Golden Gate BridgeMay 27, 1937
5Itaipu DamMay 5, 1984
6Delta Works/ Zuiderzee WorksMay 10, 1997
7Panama CanalJanuary 7, 1914
3 more rows

Why is the Golden Gate Bridge one of the seven wonders? ›

More than 60 years after its completion, the Golden Gate Bridge remains the world's tallest suspension bridge. Hanging from two 746-ft-high towers, its cables -- each a yard thick --are the biggest ever to support a bridge. In fact, the Golden Gate Bridge contains enough cable to encircle the earth three times.

What are the seven wonders of the United States? ›

What are the seven natural wonders of America? Niagara Falls, the Grand Canyon, the Giant Sequoia Forest, and Devil's Tower are America's most famous natural wonders. Other wonders include Monument Valley, Death Valley, and Hubbard Glacier in Alaska.

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