How da Vinci's Interlocking Bridge Worked

In 1502, Leonardo da Vinci designed a self-supporting bridge for Ottoman Sultan Beyazid II of Istanbul, intended to span the Bosphorus. It consisted only of interlocking beams with no supports underneath, no fasteners, and no mortar. The sultan didn't use the design, because he didn't believe it could possibly work. But it does, because of physics! What's more, the design is simple and portable, making it a useful military tool. Da Vinci wasn't the first to build bridges in this manner, as the Chinese used this concept a thousand years earlier, but Leonardo came up with it independently.  

Still, I can't help but think of all the things that could go wrong. Sure, the physics are sound, but it would be built and used by fallible humans. If you used one piece of weak wood, it could break. It you used wet or algae-covered wood, a tiny slip by someone walking on it could bring the whole thing down. If your builders make one mistake in construction, it could be a disaster. However, as an engineering concept, it's pretty darn cool. -via the Awesomer


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There's a woman in Vietnam that has a you tube channel that made one of these bridges all by herself. It spanned a small boy of water and it was very sturdy. It did get washed away during a monsoon but she made a new one and I doubt much of anything will destroy that bridge. The concept is so simple that I can see why that sultan had his doubts.
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