Monday, July 5, 2021

1931 MBTA/B&M North Station RR Bridge over Charles River in Boston, MA.

(Bridge Hunter; Historic Bridges; HAERSatellite)

There used to be four bascule spans here. Now there are only two. [HistoricBridges]

HAER MASS,13-BOST,74--1
1. GENERAL VIEW SHOWING BRIDGE IN 'CLOSED' POSITION - Boston & Maine Railroad, Charles River Bridges, Charles River, North Station vicinity, Boston, Suffolk County, MA

HAER MASS,13-BOST,74--2
2. GENERAL VIEW SHOWING BRIDGE IN OPEN POSITION

Part of the extensive terminal improvement program by the Boston & Maine Railroad, and the last element to be completed, was the replacement and realignment of the railroad's crossings of the Charles River. The Boston & Lowell was the first railroad in the U.S. to be faced with the need for a movable bridge, when in 1835 their tracks had to cross the Charles River in order to enter Boston. The railroad's solution was a movable span with a horizontal swing, hinged at the corner of one end. A system of cables supported the free end of the span. The structure was the forerunner of the jackknife bridge, invented in 1849. One by one, the three other railroads crossing the Charles River adopted this solution (and later the jackknife design), which became a characteristic feature of the railroads north of Boston. Beginning in the 1890s, most movable railroad bridges were replaced by steel bascule spans. Not until 1931, however, were the Charles River bridges replaces. To the very last, the bridges were air and steam operated. In 1931, after extensive filling and dredging, the channel of the Charles River was relocated further away from North Station to allow the terminal tracks to converge into eight main leads crossing the river. The four new structures were double-track, single-leaf, rolling-lift bascule bridges, a design made famous by the Scherzer Rolling Lift Bridge Company of Chicago. All four were nearly identical in design, varying only in their length and the degree of their skew, two spans crossing the channel at a slightly greater skew than the others. Two were 87 feet in length and two, 97 feet. Each span carried a single 629-ton overhead concrete counterweight and, operated by two electric motors, was controlled from the second floor of the new signal and interlocking station, located nearby on the north side of the river. The bridges were designed by Keller & Harrington, Chicago, while the steelwork was fabricated and erected by the Phoenix Bridge Company, Phoenixville, Pennsylvania. Today, only two of the bascule spans remain. [HAER-data]
 
Douglas Butler posted
Unknown Source Designed by Keller & Harrington a four track skewed Rolling Lift Bridges crossing the Charles River located in Boston, MA. Two were removed but two remains in service for the Amtrak, Commuter Rail Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority Railroad connects North Station.

safe_image for YouTube Video
Charles Olson: They're getting replaced soon, which among other things will bring six tracks across the river instead of four.

Dennis DeBruler commented on the "safe_image" post
The ends of these spans are skewed. To the left of the counterweights, you can see the piles for the two spans that have been removed.
42°22'08.0"N 71°03'54.1"W

Steven J. Brown posted
Amtrak Downeaster crossing the Charles River in Boston, Massachusetts - May 5, 2021.

11:45 video @ 4:53

20:04 video @ 0:20

It appears that the plan is to replace these two bridges with three lift bridges. I quit watching at 5:28 because it seems it becomes a sheetmetal (railfan) video instead of a history video.
@ 5:20


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