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The Golden Bridge Automatic 37mm does something no other watch does: it puts a linear baguette movement dead center in a transparent rectangular case, gold bridges and all, so you can see the entire gear train running in a straight column from 12 to 6. This is not a skeletonized version of a conventional movement. The CO 313 was engineered from the ground up to be a straight line, and the watch exists to display that fact.
Corum introduced the original Golden Bridge in 1980 as a manual-wind concept, designed by Vincent Calabrese, and it immediately stood apart from every other exhibition piece of the era because the architecture was the point, not a decoration added to an existing movement. The linear concept means all the components, mainspring barrel, gear train, escapement, are arranged along a single vertical axis instead of the overlapping stack used in every conventional round movement. Corum refined the design over several decades before introducing the CO 313 automatic in the current 37mm white gold case, which added a micro-rotor to keep the profile thin while maintaining bilateral display through both crystals.
The 37mm sizing, released in its current form in 2018, brought the watch to a wearable dimension that the earlier larger versions sacrificed for visual drama. Today Corum produces the Golden Bridge in small numbers; it is one of the few genuinely novel movement architectures still in active production.
The sapphire column that frames the movement is structural, not decorative, and any crack to the case requires factory-level disassembly that is expensive and not something most independents will attempt. White gold cases on this reference scratch readily, and because the case shape is non-standard, refinishing requires Corum or a specialist with the correct tooling. The micro-rotor in the CO 313 is sensitive to poor servicing; if a watchmaker unfamiliar with the caliber reassembles it incorrectly, rotor wear can damage the movement in ways that are not immediately visible.
Replacement parts for this caliber are not stocked by third-party suppliers, so any parts order routes through Corum, which can extend service timelines significantly. Buyers should verify both crystals are scratch-free before purchase, because replacing the exhibition sapphire components is a material portion of the watch's secondary market value.
The 313.165.59 trades well below its retail price on the secondary market, which is typical for Corum in general, not a signal of quality problems. Expect to find pre-owned examples in the $15,000 to $25,000 range depending on condition, box, and papers, against a retail price in the mid-$30,000s. This is a niche piece with a small buyer pool, so liquidity is limited and pricing can move significantly based on individual condition; plan for a longer hold if you need to sell.
The white gold version commands a modest premium over yellow gold on the used market right now, though that gap narrows quickly if condition is compromised.
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The linear baguette movement running in a straight column is the Golden Bridge; any Golden Bridge where the movement is circular or not visible inline through the case is non-genuine.
| Area | What to check | What is correct | Red flag |
|---|---|---|---|
| movement | Linear baguette movement layout | Linear baguette movement with barrel, wheels, and escapement in a straight column visible through case | Circular movement in a Golden Bridge case; non-genuine movement swap |
| crystal | Sapphire display allowing linear view | Sapphire crystal and caseback allowing full view of the linear movement architecture | Solid caseback or obscured movement view; non-genuine Golden Bridge |
| case | Tonneau case proportions | Tonneau case correctly proportioned to the linear movement width and length | Incorrect case proportions for the linear movement; wrong case or non-genuine assembly |
The CO 313 linear automatic should be serviced every five to seven years and requires a watchmaker with documented experience on the caliber or a direct service relationship with Corum. Corum's service center handles the CO 313 with full parts access; independent watchmakers who are comfortable with it exist but are rare enough that you should ask specifically before leaving the watch. Budget $1,500 to $3,000 for a full service, more if the sapphire elements need any attention.