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Located between the 3rd Avenue Bridge and the I-35W Saint Anthony Falls Bridge, [4] the Stone Arch Bridge was built in 1883 by railroad tycoon James J. Hill for his Great Northern Railway, and accessed the former passenger station located about a mile to the west, on the west bank of the river. For a time, the bridge was dubbed "Hill's Folly ...
Triple arch: Rattlesnake Canyon Bridge: 1919 2017-01-17 Santa Barbara: Santa Barbara: Stone arch San Francisco–Oakland Bay Bridge: 1936 2001-08-13 San Francisco: San Francisco: Cantilever truss/suspension: Sather Gate and Bridge: 1910 1982-03-25
Stone Arch Bridge may refer to: In the United States: (alphabetical by state, then city) Stone Arch Bridge (Champaign, Illinois), listed on the National Register of Historic Places (NRHP) Stone Arch Bridge (Danville, Illinois), NRHP-listed; Stone Arch Bridge (Minneapolis), Minnesota, NRHP-listed; Stone Arch Bridge (Keene, New Hampshire), NRHP ...
Cut Stone Bridge Extant Stone arch: 1863 1999 Southern Pacific Railroad: Runoff channel South San Francisco: San Mateo: CA-264: Black Canyon Road Bridge Bypassed Reinforced concrete open-spandrel arch: 1913 1997 Black Canyon Road Santa Ysabel Creek
Boston and Providence Railroad Bridge; Bowne Station Road stone arch bridge over tributary of the Alexauken Creek; Brand Hollow Road Stone Arch Bridge; Bridge 182+42, Northern Central Railway; Bridge 634, Northern Central Railway; Bridge at Falling Creek; Bridge between Guilford and Hamilton Townships; Bridge in Albany Township; Bridge in ...
Bridge Oldest covered bridge in California & longest wooden covered bridge in the world. [136] Menlo Park station: Menlo Park: 1867 Train station: Oldest train station in California. [137] San Buenaventura Pier: Ventura: 1870 Pier: Oldest pier in California. Weaverville Joss House: Weaverville: 1874 Taoist temple: Oldest continuously-operating ...
The single arch of the bridge has a span of 31.4 meters and a rise of 11.42 meters, which was unusually flat for the time. The structure features two different masonry techniques: the lower part is made of gneiss blocks, dry-laid, while the upper part is a superposition of layers made of gneiss flakes and lime, interspersed with bands of stone. [9]
To be included in this category, the bridge must be a deck arch bridge made of stone. Subcategories This category has the following 3 subcategories, out of 3 total.