Thursday, July 16, 2026

1870+1902+2026 NS/Pennsy Bridge over East Fork Whitewater River in Richmond, IN

(Archived Bridge Hunter; Bridge Hunter; no Historic Bridges; Satellite)

"Originally built about 1870, current trusses built in 1902 on original stone substructures." [BridgeHunter]

Street View, Aug 2024

Bituminous Kole posted two photos with the comment: "Future show: First train to roll over the new Norfolk Southern bridge over the Whitewater River in Richmond Indiana: 64Q. Yes, a loaded ethanol train. Bold."
J.B. Rail Photog shared
1
[The old trusses are between the yellow and red cranes and a new span for the south side is behind the yellow crane by the river.]

2
[The 1870 arch continues to be used.]

Bill Dwyer commented on the above post
The old one comes out...

Gary Pope posted
West side of the John’s Manville lead is in place.

The trusses were pin connected.
2010 photo by Anthony Dillon via BridgeHunter

Historic Photo via BridgeHunter

BridgeHunter

1:05:59 video @ 1:07
36 Hours From Last Train Over Old Bridge to First Train Over New Bridge
"After several months of staging equipment and materials, the demolition and replacement of Warfolk Southern's bridge over the Whitewater River in Richmond, Indiana was replaced in just days. The world's third tallest crane was instrumental in getting this work done so quickly."
At 8:24 I saw the name Terex on the crane.
I'm surprised they don't have a second hook with far fewer leads to handle the lighter loads such as track so that they could move the load much faster.
(I shoved the cursor over the railfanning parts.)

They do have the extra counterweights attached to lift the truss.
@ 40:54

He went home after this scene, so I was left with the question of how did the crane turn further to get rid of the truss? If it turned much further, its added counterweight would bump into the new span that is stored under the arch. I decided that the truss is close enough to the crane that they can remove the extra counterweight. Then they can turn the crane further and walk the crane towards the storage area for the old truss. That would explain why the crane pad is set up so that the crane can move back and forth. They needed the extra counterweight just to reach over the river to lift the second span off its piers.
@ 46:43

Note the use of spreader bars under a spreader bar so that they can lift the track at four different spots. Rails are remarkably flexible and need a lot of support.
@ 48:21

At 52:32 is the worse excavator operation that I have watched. I would think they would assign one of their better operators to this time-sensitive job.

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