Spang

small and simple bridge, usually for pedestrians only
A very plain example of a "small and simple bridge" (a plank bridge in England)
A more complex, but still "small and simple" example (a log bridge with simple abutments, additional deck boards and handrail in Sweden)
English: This gallery is for "rudimentary" small and simple bridges (special terms exist in some languages, but apparently there's no unambiguous English term). A partly related English term is log bridge (but it excludes small bridges not built of logs, and includes also larger/wider log bridges for vehicle use).
Català: Palanca o pont rudimentari
Dansk: Spang, enklest mulige bro
Deutsch: Steg, eine einfache kleine (schmale) Brücke, die meistens nur für Fußgänger gedacht ist (eventuell auch für Fahrradfahrer oder Tiere) und aus verschiedenen Materialien bestehen kann (Holz, Stein, Beton…)
Español: Pasarela o puente rudimentario
Norsk bokmål: Klopp
Svenska: Spång, en mycket enkel bro

Definition edit

English: In principle, the colloquial "small and simple bridge" terms of different languages are used similarly, although not consistently to the last detail. It very much depends on regional/cultural/historical/etc. backgrounds, how large, long or wide a bridge can be, to still be denoted as "small and simple". However, there are a few suitable criteria to narrow down the core which all these terms have in common (see also borderline cases):
  1. Such a bridge is rather narrow and short. (common interpretation: If it is longer, it needs to be narrow. If it is wider, it needs to be short.)
  2. Such a bridge is usually built for pedestrians only (footbridge), but it may also be used by cyclists, or animals, etc.
  3. Such a bridge can be made of various materials (wood, bamboo, stone, concrete…, or even metal like discarded railway tracks).
  4. Such a bridge has only one relevant structural element (e.g. one wooden plank, or a slab of concrete), or it consists of only a small number of main structural components (e.g. two parallel logs).
  5. The load-bearing structural element/s rest/s in position only by its/their own weight (e.g. on the banks of a stream). Further fixation, if existing, is secondary. Such bridges can usually be classified as simply supported single-span beam bridges.
  6. Constructed abutments at both ends of a bridge span often don't exist at all. If existing, they are not elaborately constructed, but only of simple design (rammed earth, in-situ rocks, parts of trees, rough concrete blocks, etc.).
  7. Additional elements like handrails may be present, and a bridge may feature e.g. smaller boards added on top, to provide a more even surface. But such characteristics are always secondary.

Small and simple bridges by material edit

Wood as material edit

Bamboo as material edit

Stone as material edit

Concrete as material edit

Metal as material edit

Unidentified, or combined material edit

Borderline cases edit

English: The following images should illustrate the language-dependent limits of the above definition. In some languages one or more of these bridges might still be called "small and simple", in others not.