Ponte Stanley

L'elegante ponte ad archi di Alessandria — uno sfondo scenografico per passeggiate sul lungomare e foto al tramonto.

8 AM4 PM100 EGP29.7903, 31.2094

Il Ponte Stanley è un elegante ponte pedonale e stradale che attraversa la baia di Stanley nel quartiere orientale di Alessandria. Con i suoi quattro torri ornamentali in stile neo-islamico e gli archi che si riflettono nell'acqua sottostante, il ponte è diventato uno dei simboli moderni di Alessandria e un luogo prediletto per passeggiate serali e fotografie al tramonto.

Perché visitare

Uno dei panorami più iconici della moderna Alessandria
Passeggiate serali con il tramonto che si riflette sulle acque della baia
Le torri in stile neo-islamico creano uno sfondo fotografico spettacolare

Cosa vedere

Il Ponte e la Baia
Il ponte attraversa la baia di Stanley con i suoi archi eleganti e le quattro torri decorative che gli conferiscono un'aria maestosa. La passeggiata sul ponte offre viste aperte sul Mediterraneo da un lato e sulla baia con i caffè e i ristoranti sulla costa dall'altro. Al tramonto, le torri si stagliano contro il cielo infuocato creando la cartolina più fotografata della moderna Alessandria.
Original Casing Stones
Unlike most pyramids that have been stripped of their fine outer casing over millennia — repurposed by medieval builders for mosques and fortifications — the Bent Pyramid retains much of its smooth Tura limestone surface, particularly on the upper section. This gives visitors an extraordinarily rare glimpse of how all Egyptian pyramids once appeared: gleaming white and almost luminous in the desert sun, their surfaces so polished they could be seen shimmering from across the Nile Valley. Up close, you can study the precise jointing of the casing blocks, fitted so tightly that a knife blade cannot be inserted between them. The preservation is so remarkable that from certain angles the Bent Pyramid looks almost newly built, making it the single best place in Egypt to understand the sheer visual impact these monuments had when they were new.
Interior Chambers
Two burial chambers are accessible via a narrow 79-meter descending passage that plunges steeply into the pyramid's core — the descent is physically demanding but thrilling, with the ancient stone pressing close on all sides. The lower chamber features an impressive corbelled ceiling rising 12 meters, its massive limestone blocks stepping inward in a technique the builders used to distribute the enormous weight above. A second, upper chamber is reached via a rough internal passage and offers a different corbelled ceiling design, showing how the engineers experimented with structural solutions. Opened to visitors in 2019 after being closed since 1965, the interior sees very few visitors, making it one of the most intimate pyramid experiences available in Egypt — you may well have the 4,600-year-old chambers entirely to yourself.
Satellite Pyramid
A smaller subsidiary pyramid stands about 55 meters to the south of the main structure, rising to roughly 26 meters and thought to be a ritual structure for the pharaoh's ka — the vital spiritual essence that the Egyptians believed needed its own dwelling place in the afterlife. This satellite pyramid also retains portions of its original Tura limestone casing, making it one of the best-preserved small pyramids in Egypt. Its interior contains a single descending passage leading to a modest chamber, though it was likely never intended for actual burial. The satellite pyramid provides a useful sense of scale — standing beside it, you appreciate just how enormous the main Bent Pyramid truly is, and photographing the two together with the desert stretching beyond makes for one of Dahshur's most compelling views.

Dettagli storici

Sneferu's Pyramid Program
Pharaoh Sneferu was history's most prolific pyramid builder, moving more stone than any other pharaoh — including his famous son Khufu, who built the Great Pyramid at Giza. Sneferu constructed at least three major pyramids: the Meidum Pyramid (which likely collapsed), the Bent Pyramid, and the Red Pyramid. The Bent Pyramid was his second attempt, and it represents a critical middle chapter in the story of pyramid evolution — the point where Egyptian engineers were pushing the limits of what stone construction could achieve and learning hard lessons from structural failure. The engineering insights gained here — particularly about the relationship between angle, foundation stability, and internal stress distribution — led directly to the triumphant Red Pyramid nearby, Egypt's first true smooth-sided pyramid, and ultimately to the Great Pyramid itself just one generation later.
Why the Bend?
The reason for the dramatic mid-construction angle change has been debated by scholars for over a century, and several compelling theories exist. The most widely accepted explanation is that cracks began appearing in the internal chambers and passages at the original steep 54-degree angle, forcing the builders to reduce the slope to prevent catastrophic collapse. Supporting this theory, visible repair work and cedar-beam reinforcements have been found inside the pyramid's chambers. An alternative hypothesis suggests that news of the partial or total collapse of the Meidum Pyramid — Sneferu's first attempt, located 60 km to the south — reached the Bent Pyramid's builders while construction was underway, prompting an urgent reassessment of the design. Some scholars have also proposed a more pragmatic explanation: that Sneferu's declining health meant the builders needed to finish quickly, and reducing the angle allowed them to complete the pyramid with significantly less stone and labor.

Consigli per i visitatori

  • Il tramonto è il momento migliore per le foto — arrivate 30 minuti prima per la luce ideale
  • I caffè e ristoranti sulla spiaggia di Stanley sono perfetti per un tè o una cena dopo la passeggiata
  • Combinatelo con una passeggiata lungo il lungomare Corniche
  • Di sera il ponte è illuminato — un'altra ottima opportunità fotografica

Monumenti correlati

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Orari di apertura

8 AM4 PM

Prezzo d'ingresso

100 EGP

Periodo

Old Kingdom, c. 2600 BC (4th Dynasty)

Costruito da

Pharaoh Sneferu

Posizione

29.7903, 31.2094

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