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Steel truss deck, steel pylons Twin bridges 4 lanes 229+655+229: Interstate 295 ... Category:Lists of bridges documented by the Historic American Engineering Record;
Conant Creek Pegram Truss Railroad Bridge; Connecticut River railroad bridge (Northfield, Massachusetts) Cooper River Bridges (1929–2005) County Bridge No. 45; County Line Bridge (Columbus Junction, Iowa) Crab Run Lane Truss Bridge; Craighead County Road 513C Bridge; Crescent Rail Bridge; Cut River Bridge; Cuyahoga River Bridge 1
The Braga Bridge is a continuous truss bridge. It was the fourth longest span of this type when it was completed in 1966. This list of continuous bridge spans ranks the world's continuous truss bridges in two listings: The first is ranked by the length of main span (the longest length of unsupported roadway) and the second by the total length of continuous truss spans.
The Bollman Bridge is a two-span through-truss, resting on granite abutments at each end and a granite pier in the middle of the river. The truss structure is a mixture of wrought and cast iron. The truss configuration is the design patented by Bollman as the "Bollman suspension truss" in 1852.
The first continuous truss bridge in North America was the Lachine Bridge in Montreal, built in 1888, followed by the Sciotoville Bridge in 1916 and the Bessemer & Lake Erie Railroad Bridge in 1918. [2] [1] Since the development of computer-aided engineering, continuous truss bridges have become more common.
The Astoria–Megler Bridge is a steel cantilever through-truss bridge in the Pacific Northwest region of the United States that spans the lower Columbia River. It carries a section of U.S. Route 101 from Astoria, Oregon, to Point Ellice near Megler, Washington. Opened in 1966, it is the longest continuous truss bridge in North America.
Central Avenue Bridge, a two-level deck truss bridge over the Kansas River; Highline Bridge, a one-level deck truss bridge on the KCTR railroad; Intercity Viaduct, a two-level deck truss bridge over the Kansas River and sister bridge to the Lewis and Clark Viaduct; James Street Bridge, a girder bridge over the Kansas River in Kansas City
Ninety-eight historic covered bridges of which fourteen were built before 1870 and represent the most common truss style (Burr Arch) in the state. U.S. Iowa: Nineteen covered bridges were built in Iowa between 1855 and 1885; nine remain, five of which are in Madison County around Winterset. U.S. Kentucky