Pont Notre-Dame (Mayenne)

There is a bridge here which takes a road over the canal.
Mayenne | 0.19 km | |
Pont Mac Racken | 0.17 km | |
Pont Notre-Dame (Mayenne) | ||
Pont de D304 | 0.50 km | |
Ecluse 1 Mayenne Lock | 0.60 km | |
Pont de Saint-Baudelle | 2.92 km | |
Ecluse 2 Sainte-Bourdelle | 3.38 km | |
Ecluse 3 de Grenoux | 7.37 km |
- VisuRiS — associated with Waterways of Mainland Europe
- The official inland waterway resource for Belgium with actual traffic and planned operations on the waterways. Also has voyage planning and notices to mariners
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CanalPlan has no information on any of the following facilities within range:water point
rubbish disposal
chemical toilet disposal
place to turn
self-operated pump-out
boatyard pump-out
Wikipedia has a page about Pont Notre-Dame
The Pont Notre-Dame is a bridge that crosses the Seine in Paris, France linking the quai de Gesvres on the Rive Droite with the quai de la Corse on the Île de la Cité. The bridge is noted for being the "most ancient" in Paris, in the sense that, while the oldest bridge in Paris that is in its original state is undoubtedly the Pont Neuf, a bridge in some form has existed at the site of the Pont Notre-Dame since antiquity; nonetheless, it has been destroyed and reconstructed numerous times, a fact referred to in the Latin inscription on it to honor its Italian architect, Fra Giovanni Giocondo. (See below.) The bridge once was lined with approximately sixty houses, the weight of which caused a collapse in 1499.