New Low-Level Bridge: (Satellite) Dudley B Menzies Bridge
1900 Low-Level Bridge: (Satellite, 152 photos)
The High Level Bridge with the New Low Level Bridge in the background.
Street View, May 2023 |
The south approach to the High-Level Bridge is a non-trivial trestle because this bridge is bluff-to-bluff.
Street View, May 2022 |
The new bridge has a non-vehicle deck suspended from the track deck. This deck would be easier to access than the deck on the High-Level Bridge. The upper deck looks like light rail, and it tunnels into the bluffs on both sides.
Trail View, Aug 2016 |
It looks like the new bridge is a concrete box girder bridge.
Street View, Oct 2016 |
The High-Level Bridge has a lower deck for vehicles and pedestrians.
Street View, Apr 2021 |
Steven J. Brown posted VIA Rail Canadian #1 crosses the North Saskatchewan River in Edmonton, Alberta - March 2, 1998. Stan McFaull: Clover Bar trestle,built in 1910.I actually have a picture when it was being built in my wallet,cut it out of a magazine. Steven J. Brown shared |
The 1900 Low-Level Bridge.
Boat View, Jul 2023 |
Note all of the utilities that are between the trusses.
Street View, Jul 2023 |
Jeff Wallace Flickr, License: Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial (CC BY-NC) Waiting for Night Long exposure along the shores of the North Saskatchewan River, once the super highway of trappers and explorers as they opened the west. |
Both the 1913 Bridge and New Bridge appear to be light rail bridges. I checked that out when I noticed this photo looked like a streetcar bridge.
Bridges Now and Then posted The High Level Bridge, Edmonton, Alberta, 1913. (Photo found on eBay) Brian Geidt: Granny Joyce could remember a flood when they parked trains on the trestle to hold it in place, the water was at the level of the tracks Mark Kirwin: Brian Geidt That happened. It was on the Low Level bridge though. https://edmonton.skyrisecities.com/news/2016/12/1915-flood-and-rescue-low-level-bridge.24067 |
skyrise, image via City of Edmonton Archives The Low-Level Bridge was the first bridge built across the river. It was opened in 1900 and the High-Level Bridge was opened in 1913. The southern span of the Low-Level Bridge was opened in 1948. The railroad track on the 1900 span was removed in 1954. "On June 28, 1915, the city of 60,000 people was hit with heavy spring runoff and several days of rain, causing the North Saskatchewan River to rise more than 10 metres [66']....The Canadian Northern Railway parked multiple train cars loaded with sand on the bridge to weigh it down, preventing the dislodging of the bridge deck. Powerful engines on each side were ready to pull the cars off the bridge at a moment's notice if the structure began to destabilize." |
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