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The Powers Highway Bridge is a rigid-connected lattice pony truss bridge. It has a 25-foot span and a 15.8 foot-wide roadway on a 16.3-foot wide deck. The deck is constructed of a single layer of wood deck over six steel I-beam stringers and two outside channels. The bridge sits on a masonry abutment substructure. [3]
The structures include the 4.35 miles (7.00 km) of roadway, the road drainage system, eight culverts, and a skew I-beam bridge. Empire Construction paved this section of the Lincoln Highway in 1924. Part of the paving project included the construction of a new bridge. The I-beam structure was completed by C.J. Kramme of Fort Dodge, Iowa for ...
The Pennsylvania Department of Transportation once applied for a Water Obstruction and Encroachment permit to replace a reinforced concrete I-beam bridge carrying State Route 2013 over Chapman Creek with a reinforced concrete box culvert bridge 20 feet (6.1 m) wide and 7 feet (2.1 m) high. This project did not propose to impact any part of the ...
The Willow Creek Bridge, which brought a Pierce County, Nebraska road over Willow Creek, about 6.5 miles (10.5 km) miles south of Foster, Nebraska, was built in 1913. It is a Lattice truss bridge. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1992. [1] The bridge was moved to Gilman Park in Pierce, Nebraska in 1994. [2]
The Tulip Viaduct is a 2,295-foot (700 m) long railroad bridge (also known as the Greene County Viaduct or Tulip Trestle, and officially designated Bridge X76-6) in Greene County, Indiana, that spans Richland Creek between Solsberry and Tulip. [1]
A bridge carrying US Route 11 over the creek was built in 1969, as was a prestressed box beam or girders bridge. Their lengths are 212.0 feet (64.6 m) and 78.1 feet (23.8 m), respectively. [22] A seven-span bridge carrying Interstate 84 over Roaring Brook was constructed in 1974.
Bridge over Fountain Creek: 1932 1985-02-04 Manitou Springs: El Paso: Open Spandral Deck Arch Browns's Canyon Bridge: 1908 2013-07-30 Salida: Chaffee: Concrete slab and girder Cherry Creek Bridge: 1948 2002-10-15 Franktown
Beam bridges are the simplest structural forms for bridge spans supported by an abutment or pier at each end. [1] No moments are transferred throughout the support, hence their structural type is known as simply supported. The simplest beam bridge could be a log (see log bridge), a wood plank, or a stone slab (see clapper bridge) laid