The CPLP Bridge (Portuguese: Ponte CPLP, Tetum: Ponte CPLP) (known during the construction phase as Comoro Bridges I and II) is a pair of two-lane road bridges in the suco of Comoro [de], a western suburb of Dili, capital city of East Timor.
The bridge was built to replace an earlier Comoro Bridge I, a steel framed structure on the same site that had been a vital transport route in Dili,[3][5][6] as it had been the only bridge[7][8]: 4-1 over the main and largest of Dili's four major rivers.[8]: 2-3 [9]: 1
The project for the new bridge was one of a number of infrastructure schemes developed by the Government of East Timor in preparation for the 10th CPLP Summit (Portuguese: X Cimeira da CPLP), the 10th biennial meeting of heads of state and heads of government of the Community of Portuguese Language Countries (Portuguese: Comunidade dos Países de Língua Portuguesa (CPLP)), which was held in Dili on 23 July 2014.[10]
Construction of the new bridge proceeded in two stages.[1] In 2012, the East Timorese Ministry of Public Works initiated the first stage, by engaging a joint venture consisting of an Indonesian State-owned enterprise, PT Wijaya Karya (Persero) Tbk. (WIKA) [id], and a local group, the Timorese National Consortium (Portuguese: Consórcio Nacional Timorense (CNT)), as contractor to build Comoro Bridge II alongside the existing bridge. Work on that stage began on 1 September 2012 and ended on 31 May 2013, at a contract price of US$8.758 million.[2][3][5]
On 30 May 2013, the Comoro II Bridge was inaugurated by the Prime Minister of East Timor, Xanana Gusmão.[1][2] During his speech at the ceremony, the Prime Minister praised the builders of the bridge, but also criticised those who:
"... do not want to work and only sit in front of the television smoking, while our Indonesian friends are doing the work. In this way, we are not going to make progress. When WIKA started this job, despite having a very short time frame, and having faced very bad weather, they continued to work. We are now going to repair [sic - replace] the other part of the bridge. However, we also need to concentrate ourselves on other projects, which are equally important to our development. I therefore ask for a strong commitment from WIKA and the CNT. I am also asking the community of Comoro to commit itself in the country's development."[2]
Two days earlier, on 28 May 2013, demolition of the old Comoro Bridge I had started. On 11 October 2013, the same WIKA/CNT joint venture began construction of the replacement Comoro Bridge I. The construction work took until 8 July 2014; its total cost was the higher sum of over US$11.7 million, as it included the installation of a footpath on each of the outward facing sides of the new pair of bridges.[6][11]
On the day on which the replacement Comoro Bridge I was completed, the Minister of Public Works, Gastão de Sousa [de], announced that the new pair of bridges across the Comoro would be named the CPLP Bridge, in honour of the CPLP.[12] On 22 July 2014, the day before the 10th CPLP Summit, the President of East Timor, Taur Matan Ruak, inaugurated the completed structure as a whole.[13][14] During his speech, the President said that the CPLP Bridge:
"... is a symbol, a happy choice in recognition of the solidarity of friends and brothers of Timor-Leste who supported us during the liberation struggle. The CPLP is an identity and this is a bridge between Timor-Leste and brother nations across the seas."[13]
Also present at the inauguration ceremony were representatives of the CPLP and of the government of East Timor, including Xanana Gusmão.[13] The other member countries of the CPLP were represented at the ceremony as follows:
After the bridge was opened, an arch extending over both of its roadways, and a Kaibauk mounted above the apex of the arch, were added at the pylon. The cost of these additions was about $3 million.[11]
In early 2019, flooding of the river was observed to have caused degradation and damage to the foundations of some of the bridge piers. In an effort to prevent any further such damage, the Ministry of Public Works has constructed retention dams in the river.[15]
Description
CPLP Bridge is an extradosed bridge with its deck resting on pre-cast I-girders. It is 183 m (600 ft) long, each of its roadways is 7 m (23 ft) wide, and it has a footpath on each side.[1][2][3]
^ abRQA (2014). "Bukti Dedikasi di Jembatan Comoro I" [Proof of dedication on Comoro Bridge I] (PDF). WIKAmagz (in Indonesian) (6/2014): 23. Retrieved 5 February 2022.
^"Summary"(PDF). Preparatory Survey Report on the Project for the Construction of the Upriver Comoro Bridge in the Democratic Republic of Timor-Leste (Report). Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA). February 2014. pp. i–vi. Retrieved 12 February 2022.
^Reis, Arsenio (26 July 2014). "Inaugurada Ponte CPLP em Díli" [CPLP Bridge opened in Dili]. Plataforma Media (in Portuguese). Retrieved 6 February 2022.
^Guterres, Rui Hernâni F.; Pereira Araújo, Vital N. (17–18 June 2019). Barragens de Retenção: Ribeira de Comoro [Retention Dams: Comoro River] (PDF). 10º encontro Técnico-Científico dos Laboratórios de Engenharia Civil da Comunidade dos Países de Língua Portuguesa (CPLP) [10th Technical-Scientific Meeting of the Civil Engineering Laboratories of the Community of Portuguese Speaking Countries (CPLP)] (in Portuguese). Maputo: Ministry of Public Works (East Timor).