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The bridge, described as a, Concrete slab and girder, was modified and repaired in 1993. Hell Canyon Bridge: 1923 1988-09-30 Drake: Yavapai: Concrete slab and girder: Hereford Bridge: 1912, 1927 1988-09-30 Hereford
While the bridge is typical, the fact that it was constructed in stages is unusual. The span constructed in 1912 is one of the two earliest trusses used for transporting vehicles in Arizona. [2] The bridge consists of three spans, with a 102-foot span length and an overall roadway length of 267 feet. The roadway width is 15.7 feet.
Upon completion, the bridge became one of the longest highway structures in the state of Arizona and was at first the longest steel bridge as well. [1] The bridge was added to the National Register of Historic Places on May 5, 1981. [8] Throughout the 1920s and 1930s, US 80 received many upgrades and modifications to its roadway including pavement.
Whispering Pines Bridge Replaced Pratt truss: 1913 1995 Forest Service Control Road East Verde River: Payson: Gila: AZ-50-D: San Carlos Irrigation Project, Sacaton Dam and Bridge: Extant Reinforced concrete girder: 1926 1995 Olberg Road Gila River
Border crisis: by 2019 Arizona was one of the states most affected by the border crisis, with a high number of migrant crossings and detentions. [69] The COVID-19 pandemic in Arizona (2020–2021) saw Arizona as one of the worst-hit states, with high infection and death rates. As of June 3, 2021 the cumulative totals were 882,691 cases and ...
In Phoenix, the Central Avenue bridge over the Salt River is approved. [55] The original "Old Main" campus of Mesa High School opens. Mesa installs potable waterworks system. Arizona Overland Telephone Company opens in Flagstaff, giving residents long distance capability for the first time; headquartered in the Telegraph Building, built the ...
A dam and replacement bridge were built and the river was rerouted. [3] The bridge is 1,184 feet (361 m) long in total, with a deck width of 16 feet (4.9 m). Its main span is a 798 feet (243 m) Warren-type pony truss bridge suspended by cables from rocker type towers. The span is held by two steel cables 5.75 inches (0.146 m) in diameter and ...
Chevelon Creek Bridge is a historic road bridge located about 12 miles (19 km) southeast of Winslow, in Navajo County, eastern Arizona, United States. [2] It is a steel Warren Pony truss bridge over Chevelon Creek, built on the first permanent road connecting Holbrook, the seat of Navajo County, and Winslow.