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The High Steel Bridge is a truss arch bridge that spans the south fork of the Skokomish River, on National Forest Service road #2340 in Mason County, Washington, near the city of Shelton. [1] The bridge is 685 feet (209 m) long, and its deck is 375 feet (114 m) above the river.
Name Image Built Listed Location County Type [2]; 12th Avenue South Bridge: 1911, 1912 1982-07-16 Seattle: King: Steel deck arch: South Park Bridge (Seattle) (14th/16th Avenue South Bridge)
The Vance Creek Bridge is an arch bridge in the Satsop Hills of Mason County, Washington that was built for a logging railroad owned by the Simpson Logging Company in 1929. At 347 feet (106 m) in height, it is the second-highest railroad arch in the United States after the nearby High Steel Bridge . [ 2 ]
Washington state's High Steel Bridge surrounded by trees. (Clinton Ward / Getty Images) Five to seven people fall off the bridge every year, and the majority die, Ripp said, even though the area ...
Pages in category "Road bridges on the National Register of Historic Places in Washington (state)" The following 48 pages are in this category, out of 48 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
Fryingpan Creek Bridge Extant Steel arch: 1931 1992 Yakima Park Highway Fryingpan Creek Longmire: Pierce: WA-55: Laughingwater Creek Bridge Replaced Reinforced concrete girder: 1935 1992 SR 123 (East Side Highway) Laughingwater Creek Packwood: Lewis
That bridge opened in 1930 and replaced a steel-truss swing bridge from 1885. Part of the 1930 bridge now carries the East Bay Bike Path and remains the face of the Washington Bridge from the south.
Also called Colfax and Road Covered Bridge; burned on September 8, 2020 [1]: xxxii Weyerhaeuser Pe Ell Bridge: Lewis: Pe Ell: 1934 Chehalis River: Weyerhaeuser Company: Howe; pony truss: Added to the NRHP in 1982, was reported by the state as destroyed in 1990. [5] Completely lost during a 2007 flood, a replacement, known as the Tin Bridge ...