Dutch Designer Turns Fictional Bridges On Euro Bills Into Reality

Dutch designer and illustrator Robin Stam has permanently changed the landscape of one corner of the Netherlands. Taking inspiration from the bridges depicted on euro banknotes, Stam had decided to turn them into reality.

Funnily enough, the images of bridges on the euro banknotes were completely imaginary and didn’t actually exist anywhere in Europe. They were Austrian artist Robert Kalina’s way of echoing the major ages and architectural styles of Europe.

Designer Stam thought it was a pity the bridges were fictional, so he rolled up his sleeves and brought them to life. Now, Stam’s colorful and iconic bridges, built near a housing estate, continue to brighten up the city of Spijkenisse, near Rotterdam, for nearly a decade.

More info: RobinStam.nl | Instagram

5 Euro — Classical

Image credits: atlasobscura

Image credits: atlasobscura

10 Euro — Romanesque

Image credits: atlasobscura

Image credits: atlasobscura

20 Euro — Gothic

Image credits: atlasobscura

Image credits: atlasobscura

50 Euro — Renaissance

Image credits: atlasobscura

Image credits: atlasobscura

100 Euro — Baroque and Rococo

Image credits: atlasobscura

Image credits: atlasobscura

200 Euro — Age of Iron and Glass

Image credits: atlasobscura

Image credits: atlasobscura

500 Euro — Modern 20th-century architecture

Image credits: atlasobscura

Image credits: atlasobscura

Stam got a letter of approval for his project from the European Central Bank and he even cinched the support of the Spijkenisse city council. They financed his project with 1.3 million dollars which was around a quarter more expensive than what a more simple set of bridges would have cost.

However, the council thought of it as an investment in the future. “All the attention is more than worth it,” Spijkenisse alderman Gert-Jan ’t Hart told Bloomberg in 2012.

Designer Stam wanted to give the bridges an exaggerated theatrical appearance. However, because he didn’t have a background in architecture or engineering, he worked with an entire team of experts to turn his vision into reality. Most of the bridges were built by pouring colored concrete into wooden molds with relief patterns. However, the two more modern bridges (the 200 and 500 euro bill ones) were built using steel.

Artist Kalina’s drawing on the 5 euro bridge represents Classical Antiquity. Meanwhile, the 10 euro bridge represents the Romanesque period. The 20 euro bridge depicts the Gothic period, the 50 euro one is from the Renaissance, the 100 euro bridge represents Baroque and Rococo, and the 200 euro note represents the Age of Iron and Glass architecture. Finally, the 500 euro note depicts modern 20th-century architecture.

The 7 banknotes picturing Kalina’s drawings came into circulation in the European Union on January 1, 2002. The bridges are a metaphor for the cooperation and communication between European nations and between Europe and the rest of the world.

Image credits: thebridgesofeurope

Image credits: thebridgesofeurope

People adored Stam’s project

Image credits: page_eco

Image credits: MarianneInBxl

Image credits: c4ble78

Image credits: AndyESherman



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