Street View, Jun 2017 |
Thomas Engel posted Mitchell Road, Pittsford, NY. This spans the Erie Canal. Under it is the unique Harcon lift boat. |
Samuel Brown-Steiner, Jul 2014 |
These are notes that I am writing to help me learn our industrial history. They are my best understanding, but that does not mean they are a correct understanding.
Street View, Jun 2017 |
Thomas Engel posted Mitchell Road, Pittsford, NY. This spans the Erie Canal. Under it is the unique Harcon lift boat. |
Samuel Brown-Steiner, Jul 2014 |
Street View, Jul 2024 |
HAER PA,39-ALLEN,8--11 (CT) OVERVIEW FROM SOUTHEAST. - South Eighth Street Viaduct, Spanning Little Lehigh Creek at Eighth Street (State Route 2055), Allentown, Lehigh County, PA [This is the bridge before the 2016 rehab.] |
Significance: The South Eighth Street Viaduct (Albertus L. Meyers Bridge) is one of the earliest surviving examples of "monumental" reinforced concrete construction. Initially planned in 1900 as a steel truss structure over the Little Lehigh Creek, the final result, built more than a decade later, represents the financial collaboration between the Allentown Bridge Company's founders and Harry Trexler, owner of the Lehigh Portland Cement Company. At the turn of the twentieth century, concrete and related products were becoming an important component in the Lehigh Valley's economy alongside the earlier iron and steel industries. The South Eighth Street Viaduct is fine example of the adaptation of architecture and engineering to local landscapes and economic needs. The structure was listed in the National Register of Historic Places in 1988. [HAER_data]
1916 Postcard via BridgeHunter |
HistoricBridges |
Jeff Flickr Cars Pass Under the Albertus L. Meyers Bridge The Albertus L. Meyers Bridge (also known as the Eighth Street Bridge) is a reinforced concrete arch bridge with 17 spans, located in Allentown, PA, USA. When opened for traffic on November 17, 1913, it was known as the Eighth Street Bridge, and was the longest and highest concrete bridge in the world. The bridge spans the Little Lehigh Creek and Martin Luther King Blvd, as well as the former Mack Truck assembly plant. |
HAER PA,39-ALLEN,8--5 3/4 VIEW OF BASE OF ARCH FROM NORTHEAST. |
Bridges Now and Then posted Eighth Street Bridge construction, Allentown, Pennsylvania, 1912. (Public Domain) |
1 |
Brian Benson Flickr Hojack Swing Bridge |
Google Earth, May 2011 |
Street View, Jul 2023 |
1 |
2 |
3 |
Street View, Feb 2023 |
WaterAndPower, RegularDaddy "The Vincent Thomas Bridge is a 1,500-foot-long [457m] suspension bridge, crossing the Los Angeles Harbor, linking San Pedro with Terminal Island. It is the only suspension bridge in the Greater Los Angeles area....The bridge opened in 1963 and is named for California Assemblyman Vincent Thomas of San Pedro, who championed its construction." |
WaterAndPower, L.A. Harbor Department Photo "The bridge is 6,060 feet [1,847m] long, 52 feet [16m] wide, 365 feet [110m] tall. Its longest span is 1,500 feet [457m], and the clearance below is 185 feet [56m]." |
Bridges Now and Then posted On San Pedro, California's, Vincent Thomas Bridge, c. 1962. (Chronobook) Dave Frieder: Main Cables and suspender ropes by John A. Roebling's Sons Inc. |
WaterAndPower, PortOfLosAngeles "The Vincent Thomas Bridge is the first suspension span ever to be built on steel piles — 990 of them were sunk to hold it up, instead of the more traditional concrete supports. And it is the first to be built entirely without rivets; the steel is welded together." [No use of rivets explains why Historic Bridges doesn't include this bridge.] |
Street View, May 2019 |
SanPedro In 2005, it got 160 blue LED lights. They are powered by solar panels. "The solar panels feed more electricity into the grid during the day than the LED lights use at night." |
Street View, Jun 2024 |
Street View, Nov 2017 |
Mike Elliott posted Howard Street Bridge - Baltimore,Md. circa 1955 By A. Aubrey Bodine - Baltimore's Best Pictorialist Bridges Now and Then shared |
Satellite |
2007 photo taken by Tom Hall via BridgeHunter |
Street View, Apr 2023 |
Historic covered bridge at Philippi, the only double that I've ever seen. The 8 original laminated wood arches are easy to see, but now they're only cosmetic. To support modern truck traffic, two more support piers in the river were added, along with steel I-beams under the decking. The stone pier is original.A former B&O passenger station stands at the east end of the bridge.
2 |
3 |
4 |
5 Randall Hampton shared John Voelker: I was on a training trip for the Chessie System Coal Department in 1983. We stopped at the Bridge in Philippi and the guy training me took my picture. I remember he told me that the first skirmish of the Civil War was fought there. |
Philippi covered bridge, located in the town of Philippi, Barbour County, West Virginia. The oldest and longest covered bridge in the state. Damaged by fire in 1989 and restored. Built in 1852, at 304 [93m] feet in length, over the Tygart River. The bridge is supported by a Burr Arch variation.The town and bridge was the site of the first land battle of the civil war. Photo takes 08/17/2024.
1 |
2 |
3 |
4 |
5 |
6 |
1 |
2 |
3 |
4 |