ABSTRACT

This book focuses on the woven arch bridge, an arch-shaped structure that is one of the most extraordinary timber building traditions of the world. The woven arch bridge exists widely in different cultures and its specific nature is conceptualized by the author as a kind of “universal uniqueness,” challenging widespread viewpoints on its origin and genealogy.

Taking this argument as its main thread, the book traces the histories of different woven-arch-bridge-cultures and investigates in particular the woven arch bridge in the mountains of Southeast of China from three angles, using both archaeological and anthropological methods. Resting upon these case studies, a definition of typology and a new theory of structural evolution are established, while the book also draws comparisons between western and eastern timber building cultures and offers new insights on the differences between East Asia and Europe.

The book also provides a large number of examples and illustrations of the bridge, and will be of great value and inspiration for architects and scholars studying the history of architecture, bridges, and construction, while also appealing to general readers interested in historical bridges and traditional construction technology.

chapter |5 pages

Introduction

part I|113 pages

Woven arch bridges

chapter 1|37 pages

From Caesar to Da Vinci

The woven structure’s Italian root

chapter 2|43 pages

A full moon in another land

The Moon Bridge in the Japanese Garden of the Huntington Library

part II|216 pages

Woven arch bridges in Southeast China

chapter |9 pages

Introduction to Part II

chapter 4|100 pages

Building a woven arch bridge

Local knowledge

chapter 5|28 pages

The Rulong Bridge

A detective story

chapter 6|77 pages

Technique and craftsmen

Pedigree of the bridge carpenters and the diffusions of the technique

part III|37 pages

Conclusion