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Marion County Bridge 0501F, also known as Indiana State Bridge 534-C-3439 on SR 100, is a historic truss bridge located on the Michigan Road at Indianapolis, Marion County, Indiana. It was built in 1941–1942, as a bridge along the State Road 100 project. It consists of two identical Warren pony truss sections at each end with two Parker ...
In 2021, the city built a bridge over 38 th Street, at a cost of $5.6 million. Like the Monon, the Nickel Plate in Indianapolis will cross several high-traffic east-west roads between 42 nd Street ...
Scope: This project is related to articles about specific bridges and tunnels, types of bridges and tunnels, lists of bridges and tunnels, bridge and tunnel categorization, and related templates. If you would like to help, check the to do list or articles needing attention .
Bridge–tunnel Completion Country Location Body/ies of water Notes Hampton Roads Bridge–Tunnel: 1957/1976 United States Norfolk and Hampton, Virginia Hampton Roads: Chesapeake Bay Bridge–Tunnel: 1964/1999/2030s United States Virginia Beach and Northampton County, Virginia Chesapeake Bay: Louis-Hippolyte Lafontaine Bridge–Tunnel: 1967 Canada
North of Indianapolis, US 421 continues to the north-northwest, providing a direct highway link between Indianapolis and Michigan City. US 421 ends at its junction with US 20 on the south side of Michigan City. Originally, the highway's end was a few miles north at the junction with US 12 near the shores of Lake Michigan.
Gospel Street Bridge Extant Pratt truss: 1880 1981 South Gospel Street Mill Creek Paoli: Orange: IN-25: Tippecanoe River Bridge Replaced Baltimore truss: 1890 1981 CR 350 E Tippecanoe River: Rochester: Fulton
The liveries of the Nos. 7, 6 and 5 were painted as the McLaren M16C/D that won the 1974 Indianapolis 500, the McLaren MP4/2 that won the 1984 Monaco Grand Prix, and the McLaren F1 GTR that won the 1995 24 Hours of Le Mans respectively to honor the three winning McLaren cars that forms the Triple Crown.
Michigan Road, as well as other early roads, in Indiana. The Michigan Road was one of the earliest roads in Indiana.Roads in early Indiana were often roads in name only. In actuality they were sometimes little more than crude paths following old animal and Native American trails and filled with sinkholes, stumps, and deep, entrapping ruts.