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The northbound span was originally named the 14th Street Bridge when it opened in 1950, renamed the Rochambeau Bridge eight years later, and renamed the Arland D. Williams Jr. Memorial Bridge in 1985 for a passenger of Air Florida Flight 90, who died in 1982 saving others from the freezing water.
The Chattahoochee RiverWalk also connects to the Phenix City RiverWalk at the 14th Street Bridge. The Phenix City RiverWalk extends from the Dillingham Street bridge to the 14th Street bridge, but it will extend up to the City Mills Dam on the Alabama side of the Chattahoochee River. [3]
14th Street Bridge may refer to: Fourteenth Street Bridge (Ohio River) in Louisville, Kentucky; 14th Street Bridges over the Potomac River in Washington, D.C. See also
When the first of the 14th Street bridges, the Rochambeau Bridge (later the Arland D. Williams Bridge), was built in 1950, it left the restaurant surrounded by highways, which necessitated the construction of special exits and sidewalks with underpasses to reach it. Hot Shoppes, Inc later built the Marriott Motor Hotel across the highway from ...
Nikon Coolpix P100. This is a list of bridge cameras, which are loosely defined as fixed-lens digital cameras with DSLR-style bodies and superzoom lenses. [1] [2] Their larger bodies and lenses differentiate them from smaller superzoom compact cameras, also known as travel zoom cameras.
14th Street may refer to several locations in the United States: 14th Street (Manhattan), New York City; 14th Street Northwest and Southwest (Washington, D.C.) Broad Street (Philadelphia) 14th Street Bridge (Potomac River) 14th Street (Hoboken) 14th Street Viaduct (Jersey City, New Jersey) Fourteenth Street Bridge (Ohio River) Transit
Mayo's Bridge (also known as Richmond's 14th St. Bridge) is located in Richmond, Virginia. [1] A four lane structure, it transports U.S. Route 360 across the James River. Signage identifies the bridge as "Mayo's Bridge". The bridge is in two sections, separated near the middle by Mayo's Island.
Position of the project on the 14th Street Bridge. The Washington D.C. Department of Transportation believed that the watchtower, which served as a lookout point for the bridge's former role as a drawbridge (which ended in the 1960s), was an eyesore and requested the assistance of the D.C. Commission on the Arts and Humanities to find an artist to create something that would enhance the space.