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Corum Golden Bridge: Leading the Charge for Transparency
Corum Golden Bridge: Leading the Charge for Transparency
The Birth of Transparency
The idea of the Golden Bridge was born when Corum co-founder René Bannwart met Italian-born, self-taught master watchmaker – and later co-founder of the Académie Horlogère des Créateurs Indépendants (AHCI) – Vincent Calabrese. Calabrese encountered a turning point in his career when working as a boutique manager for a retail outlet in Crans-Montana, a well-known ski resort in the heart of the Swiss Alps. His wealthy clients often asked for personalised timepieces, which gave him the idea to create a movement that was easily customised while also being structural and airy. Simultaneously, this watch would have nothing to obscure the view of the movement within, i.e. no dial to hide the watchmaker’s work.

The Golden Bridge was more than just a timepiece; it delivered its own messages. For Calabrese, the message was that neither the watchmaker nor his work should be hidden any longer. For Corum the message was that mechanics and art can coexist to make a beautiful, wearable object.
The Difficulty of Transparency
The original Golden Bridge’s serial case comprised two hand-faceted sapphire crystals cut in a difficult bombé-creusé shape that resembled a domed half of a cross-sectioned hexagon held together by two bases of yellow gold and four golden screws. Number 001 was presented to the Musée International d’Horlogerie (MIH) in La Chaux-de-Fonds on 25 September 1980, and it is still on display there.
To understand the novelty of this watch at the height of the Quartz Crisis, and the degree of difficulty of making it fully encased in sapphire crystal in 1979, it is helpful to understand something of the process of making synthetic sapphire crystal. The flame fusion used for this sees a single ingot of synthetic colourless corundum in the necessary size “created” in about 15 hours – something that nature needs about 100,000 years to accomplish.
In 1979, sapphire crystal was not regularly used; Seitz AG’s ability to create such a precisely faceted crystal with a hole for the crown (drilled out using precision diamond-tipped tools and also made water-resistant with a gasket, all without compromising the transparency) was nothing short of a miracle. Reproducing the original crystal today would be much easier as cutting and polishing technologies have vastly improved since then.
Reimagining Transparency
Severin Wunderman founded Severin Montres in 1972 in Switzerland. The company’s best-selling product line was licensed Gucci watches, allowing Wunderman to practise his special brand of entrepreneurial and artistic creativity using the Gucci name. Corum going up for sale in the late-1990s when Bannwart retired from daily business coincided with Gucci taking control of its own watch brand, and Wunderman (who now had capacity) was smitten – especially by the Golden Bridge.
Additionally, Wunderman was of the opinion that the modern age demanded distinct male and female case sizing as the era produced larger and larger wristwatches for men. The redesigned case contained four crystals instead of two: one on the back, one on the front and one on each lateral side. In between each crystal ran a shaft of gold or platinum. The new design strengthened the case, making it much more able to withstand shock and accentuating the straight line of the movement. And thanks to his artistic sensibilities, Wunderman launched limited edition after limited edition in many precious metals and gem-set variations.
Strengthening Transparency: Calibre CO 113
Corum’s delicate Calibre 13 became the sturdier Calibre CO 113 in time for the 50-year celebration thanks to a collaboration with Vaucher Manufacture in Fleurier, Switzerland. While the original version had an excellent, successful design, it had a few technical problems that, for one, made it somewhat unreliable and, for another, impossible to add to – with, for example, a tourbillon. So Corum’s biggest goal was to modernise and reinforce the movement.
The reinforced movement also made new mechanical iterations possible, the first of which arrived in 2009: the Ti-Bridge, which saw parts of the Golden Bridge now crafted in titanium (including bridges and case) and the movement now turned on its side. In 2010, Vaucher’s engineers were able to finally add a largely silicon-manufactured tourbillon housed in what Corum claimed was the world’s smallest tourbillon cage at the time, coming in at 8.5mm in diameter, resulting in a limited edition of 33 pieces of Calibre CO213. Beating at 19,200 vph, its plate and bridges were crafted in hand-engraved 18-carat gold.
While the Golden Bridge’s future keeps shifting shape, one thing does remain a constant: this pellucid watch’s amazing ability to continue showcasing the watchmaker’s art as its original architects intended.
Corum