bogdan khmelnitsky kievsky pedestrian bridge

navigate by keyword : 1907 2001 after arch blue bogdan bohdan bridge building canopy city core cossack embankment glass hetman hetmanate inside instead khmelnitsky khmelnytskyi kievsky krasnoluzhsky landmark moscow named new officially old pedestrian pillar planners rail river scrapping sky steel structural the ukraine used zaporozhian

Bogdan Khmelnitsky (Kievsky) Pedestrian Bridge Royalty Free Stock Photo
Bogdan Khmelnitsky (Kievsky) Pedestrian Bridge Royalty Free Stock Photo
Bogdan Khmelnitsky (Kievsky) Pedestrian Bridge Royalty Free Stock Photo
Bogdan Khmelnitsky (Kievsky) Pedestrian Bridge Royalty Free Stock Photo
Bogdan Khmelnitsky (Kievsky) Pedestrian Bridge Royalty Free Stock Photo
Bogdan Khmelnitsky (Kievsky) Pedestrian Bridge (2001). Moscow Royalty Free Stock Photo
Bogdan Khmelnitsky (Kievsky) Pedestrian Bridge (2001). Moscow Royalty Free Stock Photo
Bogdan Khmelnitsky (Kievsky) Pedestrian Bridge (20
Bogdan Khmelnitsky (Kievsky) Pedestrian Bridge Royalty Free Stock Photo
Bogdan Khmelnitsky (Kievsky) Pedestrian Bridge Royalty Free Stock Photo
Bogdan Khmelnitsky (Kievsky) Pedestrian Bridge (2001). Moscow Royalty Free Stock Photo
Inside the Bogdan Khmelnitsky (Kievsky) Pedestrian Bridge in Moscow. Royalty Free Stock Photo
Bogdan Khmelnitsky (Kievsky) Pedestrian Bridge (20 Royalty Free Stock Photo
Bogdan Khmelnitsky Kievsky Pedestrian Bridge, Moscow, Russia Royalty Free Stock Photo
Bogdan Khmelnitsky (Kievsky) Pedestrian Bridge (20 Royalty Free Stock Photo
Bogdan Khmelnitsky (Kievsky) Pedestrian Bridge (2001), inside. Instead of scrapping the old steel arch Krasnoluzhsky Rail Bridge (1907), city planners re-used it as a structural core of the new pedestrian bridge, officially named after Bohdan Khmelnytskyi, hetman of the Zaporozhian Cossack Hetmanate of Ukraine.


Stockphotos.ro (c) 2025. All stock photos are provided by Dreamstime and are copyrighted by their respective owners.