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Road bridges on the National Register of Historic Places in Texas (28 P) Pages in category "Road bridges in Texas" The following 45 pages are in this category, out of 45 total.
Kemah–Seabrook line: Bridge over Clear Lake: Harris: Seabrook: 16.6: 26.7: NASA 1 – Seabrook, Johnson Space Center: Access to Houston Methodist Clear Lake Hospital: 18.1: 29.1: Red Bluff Road 19.6: 31.5: Port Road – Port of Houston Bayport Terminal: No northbound exit (closed until February 2025), access is via U-turn at Shoreacres ...
The bridge, named for Fred Hartman (1908–1991), the editor and publisher of the Baytown Sun from 1950 to 1974, is the longest cable-stayed bridge in Texas, and one of only four such bridges in the state, the others being Veterans Memorial Bridge in Orange County, Margaret Hunt Hill Bridge in Dallas and Bluff Dale Suspension Bridge in Erath ...
Kemah (/ ˈ k iː m ə / KEE-mə) is a city in the U.S. state of Texas, southeast of Houston along west Galveston Bay. The city's population was 1,807 at the 2020 census, [6] down from 2,330 at the 2000 census. Located in Galveston County, Kemah's main industry is shipping. Originally a small fishing town, the city has become a tourist ...
In 1988, construction began on the Veterans Memorial Bridge, a cable-stayed bridge. This bridge runs parallel to the Rainbow Bridge, and was dedicated on September 8, 1990. [6] With a vertical clearance of 143 feet (44 m), the bridge is somewhat shorter than its neighbor and has 640-foot-long (200 m) main span . [7] [8]
Exits from frontage road signed as 44B (I-10 west) and 44C (I-10 east); I-10 exit 34: 45: FM 76 (North Loop Road) / Rojas Drive: 47: SH 20 (Alameda Avenue) / FM 258 (Socorro Road) / Pan American Drive: 48: Zaragoza Road: To Zaragoza International Bridge: Cardinal direction change: Eastern leg (north–south) / Southern leg (west–east) 49 ...
The High Five Interchange, north of downtown in Dallas, Texas, is a massive five-level freeway interchange. It is the junction of two major highways carrying heavy rush-hour traffic, the Lyndon B. Johnson Freeway ( I-635 ) and the Central Expressway ( US 75 ), and is the first five-level stack interchange to be built in the city.
Landry's, Inc. acquired property along the Kemah Waterfront in 1997 and opened the Kemah Boardwalk in 1998. In 2007, the Boardwalk Bullet, a high-speed wooden roller coaster opened on the boardwalk. The 96-foot-tall, 3,236-foot-long roller coaster is built on a 1-acre footprint, making it one of the most compact roller coasters in the world.