Showing posts with label bridgeGirderConcrete. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bridgeGirderConcrete. Show all posts

Friday, April 3, 2026

1930+2009 US-90 and 1902+1925 L&N Rigolets Bridges near Slidel, LA

2009 US-90: (Satellite)
1902 L&N: (Bridge Hunter)

1930 US-90 Bridge


2009 photo by Bob Davis via BridgeHunter_1930

2009 US-90 Bridge


Street View, Feb 2023

Massman
"This Louisiana Department of Transportation and Development project consists of a 5,400-foot post-tensioned, precast concrete girder bridge with more than a mile of roadway approaches. The bridge is a high rise structure with 63 bents. The cast-in-place concrete deck rises more than 70 feet above the water at the center of the pass. Thirty-four bents are constructed on land and 29 bents on the water."

Massman

This is the best photo I saw of the ringer crane.
Massman

1902 L&N Bridge


BridgeHunter_1902
"Replaced by a new bridge after a hurricane"

1925 CSX/L&N Bridge


Photo by Irene Kato via BridgeHunter_1925, cropped

HistoricBridges, cropped

David Wilkinson posted two photos with the comment: "I took these pictures riding an L&N caboose headed to Gentilly,La yard in 1978. The name of the bridge is Rigolets. I was 24 years old. 😄"
1

2


Tuesday, March 24, 2026

Collapsed 1975 and Extant 1919 Bridges over Canadian River at Calvin, OK

1919: (Archived Bridge Hunter; Bridge Hunter; no Historic Bridges; Satellite)
1975+1978: (Satellite) 1978 is my guess as to when the replacement bridge was finished.

I thought this was an bogus AI photo until I read the comments.
The collapse happened on May 21, 1976. [greenspun]
Note that the 1975 bridge stood for just a year or so before it fell down!
I thought this photo was bogus because there is no pier between the middle two collapsed spans. I guess the bridge collapsed because the pier disappeared. But how does a pier disappear?
Lunna Lucky posted
Bridge collapse Calvin OK

There were two fatalities.
newspapers, paycount of 5

I can't find any information about the cause of the collapse. 
"On May 28, 1976, the Commission authorized the Highway Department to contract with consulting firm Modjeski and Masters to perform an independent and unbiased investigation into the cause of the US-75 bridge collapse north of Calvin." [odot]
Has ODOT scrubbed all copies of that report off the internet?

1913 Bridge


I'll bet the locals were really glad that they didn't quickly tear down the old bridge after the new one was built. They at least had this old bridge to use while the new one was repaced.
Street View, May 2022

This view shows that the river was rather high in the above view. It also shows that the bridge has four spans.
Street View, Jan 2026

When I zoomed in to confirm that the bridge is pin connected, I noticed the bridge in the background. It is an abandoned railroad bridge.
Street View, Jan 2026

And the river is even lower in this photo.
OKbridges, this webpage has more photos
"This bridge was one of the earliest state-standardized designs built in Oklahoma, and other bridges exist similar in design. The state-standardized designs represented a trend towards heavier bridges than the ones commonly built from the catalogs of bridge companies."

Street View, Jun 2013

Sunday, March 8, 2026

1958,1983+1992 I-95 Bridge over Mianus River in Greenwich, CT, Collapsed in 1983

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

"Built 1958; partially collapsed June 28, 1983, killing 3 people; entire bridge replaced by new bridge in 1992" The span collapsed "due to corrosion of pin-and-hangar assembly." [BridgeHunter]

Andrea Paints posted
Just after 1:30 am on June 28 1983 a forty foot section of the Mianus River Bridge on Interstate 95 in Greenwich Connecticut collapsed.
Cars traveling at highway speed suddenly disappeared into the gap. Some plunged into the river. Others landed on fractured concrete below. Drivers approaching the break stopped only seconds before reaching the open space.
Rescuers used ropes, boats, and ladders to reach victims trapped on broken sections of roadway. Divers searched the river for vehicles that sank beneath the surface.
Investigators discovered that corrosion in the hanger assemblies caused critical support components to fail. Water and road salt had eaten into parts of the structure that were never inspected.
The collapse killed three people and triggered nationwide bridge inspection reforms, including stricter corrosion monitoring and mandatory structural evaluations.
Some survival stories are about strength you can see.
This one is about steel weakened by time and rescuers who climbed into a broken highway suspended over a river.
[I wonder if they let the drains get plugged so that the salt water could not leave the deck the proper way.]

Andrea Paints commented on her post
The Mianus collapse changed how every state inspects highway bridges. Many of today’s structural safety rules exist because of this failure.
Nick Pedicini: Remember it well. I was working for a NYC based retailer and I was supposed to drive up to the New Haven branch store on the 28th. I woke up to the news that I-95 was closed. I tried to drive up using side roads but they were jammed - you had tractor-trailers inching up and down those hills on two-lane side roads with every road bumper-to-bumper through those small towns. I gave up and went home. A week or so later, they had rigged a temporary bridge section over they missing piece and I made it up and back but it took hours to get through the bottleneck.
David John: The real culprit here was the corruption of the CT DOT who had ignored multiple complaints of concrete falling from the bridge and the bridge shaking.
Tim LaForm: David John I remember hearing stories about that. There were multiple reports from the public as well as local and state authorities there, but nothing was ever done about it, until it collapsed, and then the highway department tried to play it off as if they never knew there was any issues or problems.
Nick Pedicini: A couple of years before, they had a similar collapse in upstate New York.
Kevin Greene: 1987 was after. Schoharie Creek Bridge

I can't tell if the 1992 bridge uses concrete or steel girders. I'm guessing pre-stressed concrete.
Street View, Jul 2024


Wednesday, March 4, 2026

1997 8-mile (13km) Confederation Bridge and Ferry to Prince Edward Island, CA

Bridge: (Satellite)
Ferry: (Satellite)

A view from Prince Edward Island.
Street View, Sep 2024

This view catches the "hump" for the navigation channel.
Kristy McCoy, Jul 2019

A good view of the box-girder construction.
Hélène Blais, Aug 2022

Janey Anderson posted
Here's the Confederation Bridge - opened on May 31, 1997, the 12.9-kilometre (8.0 mi) bridge is Canada's longest bridge and the world's longest bridge over ice-covered water. It's a box girder bridge carrying the Trans-Canada Highway across the Abegweit Passage of the Northumberland Strait, linking the province of Prince Edward Island with the mainland province of New Brunswick.
And it's a LONG drive across!! 😂

This means that it is a segmented concrete girder bridge.
Mark Crenna commented on Janey's post
The company that I worked for , manufactured the electrical cable that runs the length of the bridge.
On windy days the bridge is closed to ship traffic because of the danger of a ship hitting the bridge. We crossed the bridge in May 2025.
Photo is of example of bridge construction at visitors center in PEI

Cars driving onto the ferry at the beginning of the ride.
Mahonnath K, Aug 2025

Cars waiting to drive off at the end of the ride. Note the 18-wheeler in the background.
Yoginath Poreddy, Jul 2025

This shows the ferry is symmetrical and that both ends can open up as we see in the above photos.
Joe Scanlan, Aug 2023

This shows the gate closed to keep the waves out when underway. It also shows a couple more big trucks using the ferry.
David Townsend, Jun 2025

At least one of the ferries has two decks. It also shows that some of the loads can be pretty full.
Jetlover X, Jun 2022

The second deck getting loaded.
Bill McBay, Aug 2019

In this view of an incoming ferry, we see how the cars are lined up in a parking lot so that they can quickly load onto the ferry after it empties. We also get a good view of the double-deck loading ramp.
Harri, Aug 2022

Tuesday, March 3, 2026

1934+1996 US-1 and Brightline/Florida East Coast Bridges over St. Lucie River in Stuart, FL

1934 US-1: (Archived Bridge Hunter; Bridge Hunter; no Historic Bridges; Satellite) Dixie Highway
1996 US-1: (Archived Bridge Hunter; Bridge Hunter; Satellite) Roosevelt Bridge
FEC: (Archived Bridge Hunter; Bridge Hunter; no Historic Bridges; Satellite)

A view of the railroad and Dixie Highway Bridges from the Roosevelt Bridge. 
Street View, Jul 2017

I noticed in a satellite image that the bridge was built over a lot of water. I hope that the water is shallow here and that the bedrock is close to the surface to reduce the cost of all of those piers. 
There is limestone bedrock near the surface in a lot of places in Florida.
It is 4,487' (1.4km) long with a span length of 260' (79m). [BridgeHunter_1996]
Scott Johnson (sajflorida) Flickr, License: Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial (CC BY-NC)

This shows that there are a couple of curves in the bridge.
Street View, May 2024

The 1996 Roosevelt Bridge is a concrete segmental box girder bridge. IT STARTED FALLING APART IN LESS THAN 25 YEARS! [ArchivedBridgeHunter_1996]

In June 2020, both the northbound and southbound bridges were shut down because cracks were found in the southernmost span of the southbound bridge. They also closed the 1934 Dixie Highway bridge because it passes under the cracked span. In fact, there was not just cracks, there was falling concrete! The U.S. Coast Guard overracted and declared the bridge is "at risk of an imminent collapse." The Coast Guard stopped all commercial traffic under the other end of the bridge.  [RoadsBridges]
It is interesting that the story as to how the crack was found and reported changed. Originally, it was by a construction crew on another road project. But later FDOT claimed that it was found by a routine biannual inspection.

wptv
Within hours of the Coast Guard alert, the mayor of Stuart, FL, said "FDOT engineers have not found any evidence that the bridge is at immediate risk of collapsing." "Upon inspection, engineers with FDOT found that rust in the steel cables had been exposed when the concrete fell. Further inspection revealed an area of concern on the northbound side of the bridge as well." Tolls were waved on the Florida Turnpike between Port St. Lucie and Stuart to help detour traffic around the closed bridges.

The railroad bridge is obviously a trunnion bridge because we can see the trunnion. I think the old road bridge is also a trunnion bridge.
Street View, May 2024

The railroad drawbridge was upgraded in 2023 to support better reliability and faster speeds for passenger trains.
5:20 video @ 0:37

Note that traffic is stopped. The road bridge started going up in this segment of the video.
@ 4:04

This is the post that led me down the rabbit hole of St. Lucie River Bridges. This train is one of those faster passenger trains that caused the upgrade of the railroad bridge.
Steven J. Brown posted
Brightline Siemens SCB-40 121 (built 2023) crossing the St Lucie River at Stuart, Florida - February 19, 2026. The train wears a wrap celebrating the 250-year anniversary of the USA.

Friday, February 20, 2026

1936+2013 MO-5 Hurricane Deck Bridges ov Lake of the Ozarks near Greenview, MO

1936: (Archived Bridge Hunter; Bridge Hunter; no Historic Bridges)
2013: (Satellite)

The Lake of the Ozark was created by the Bagnell Dam.

Bridges Now and Then posted
Hurricane Deck Bridge over the Lake of the Ozarks, Missouri, 1952. (HipPostcard)

Missouri State Archives via BridgeHunter

2010 photo by Joe Sonderman via BridgeHunter

2010 photo by Joe Sonderman via BridgeHunter

"This bridge was the 1936 Class B First Place Winner for the AISC Most Beautiful Steel Bridge." [ArchivedBridgeHunter]

The replacement bridge is not going to win any awards. It looks like the approach spans used concrete girders, and the main spans used steel girders.
Street View, Jun 2023

An answer to the question concerning the origin of the name Hurricane Deck.
HURRICANE DECK is a nautical term associated with river steamboats. The hurricane deck was the uppermost deck. It provided a pleasant, breezy place to watch the passing scenery.
Steamboats plied the Osage River through much of the nineteenth century. Crewmen on these steamers named many of the prominent landmarks along the way. A certain long, flat ridge along the left (descending) bank of the river caught the attention of the steamboatmen. They came to call it the "hurricane deck" because it afforded quite a view of the river, and the wind always seemed to blow there.
Hurricane Deck ridge runs along the east side of Porter Mill Bend, between mile markers 37 and 38. Lake Road 5-36 follows the crest of the ridge.
[bkoenen267 comment on ArchivedBridgeHunter]

Tuesday, February 17, 2026

1861+1905+1959,2024 Crawford Avenue Bridges over Youghiogheny River in Connellsville, PA

1861: (Archived Bridge Hunter was broke; Bridge Hunter; no Historic Bridges)
1959: (Satellite) Officer McCray Robb Memorial Bridge


The ADHD Historian posted
The Connellsville, Pennsylvania "Free Bridge" was constructed in 1898 to replace the limited capacity of the suspension bridge before it. It was turned over to the citizens of Connellsville and New Haven in 1907.

Postcard via BridgeHunter_1905

Internet Archive Book Images via BridgeHunter_1905

1861 Suspension Bridge


BridgeHunter_1861

T.M. Fowler via BridgeHunter_1861

Digitally Zoom and doubled in size

1959 Bridge


Street View, Aug 2023

Note how low the hand railings are. Low hand railings freak me out. I find myself walking very near the street on the sidewalk when the handrails are a pathetic joke.
Street View, Aug 2023

2024 Superstructure Rebuild with Galvanized Girders.


GalvanizeIt
In 2024, a $11.5m rehab project rebuilt the superstructure. "Galvanizing of the girders, cross frames, and splice plates was chosen because of the proximity of the Youghiogheny River and the corrosive environment in the area."

The new bridge has much better handrails.
Street View, Jun 2025

I researched the rebuild project when the satellite image didn't look like a valid bridge.
Satellite

All of the Bridges


Connellsville Area Historical Society added six photos with the comment:
A HISTORY OF THE 7 CRAWFORD BRIDGES IN CONNELLSVILLE 
THE 1ST BRIDGE) Wooden (1800?-1816)
Isaac Meason and Zachariah Connell, their heirs and assigns, were to erect or build a bridge in the manner in this act before mentioned, on any private property — without the consent of the owner or owners thereof, or to erect the same in such manner as in any way to injure the navigation of said river, or the passage over the ford across the river, near where the bridge may be erected." 
It was further provided by the act "That all poor persons, or those who may be exempted from payment of county rates and levies, shall have liberty to pass and repass over and across said bridge toll free." The time was limited to one year for beginning the erection of the bridge and to three years for its completion. The work was completed within the limit of time fixed by the statute although it is not known exactly when it was thrown open to the public.
 Its location was nearly one hundred feet up stream from the present bridge and was a wooden-bent structure, resting at the two ends on abutments, which were rude affairs, each formed of a strong crib-work of logs filled in with stones. The bridge remained for perhaps, fifteen years, and was carried away by floods sometime in the year 1816, or early in 1817, as evidenced by a niemorandum found, showing that a ferry was in operation by Joseph Keepers and George Sloan in the spring of 1817. The abutment and old toll house remained standing for a number of years at the Connellsville end about opposite the present Hotel Haas, on Water street — in fact, the toll house was not demolished until the building of the railroad made it necessary.
(THE 2ND BRIDGE) Wooden (1818-1827)
In the year 1818 the second bridge was built. This 
was also a wooden-bent structure, built after a model furnished by Adam Wilson, a Scotchman, known throughout the country for his ingenuity. This bridge was supported above by four heavy arches, formed of two-inch oak planks bolted together, and it rested between the abutments on 
three strong bents of heavy timber, having breakers extending from their bases up stream between thirty and forty feet and sloping at an angle of forty-five degrees from the bed of the river to the chords of the bridge. For nine years this bridge stood intact, but in 1827 the span next to the New Haven shore fell, while a wagon heavily laden and drawn by six horses was upon it. 
It went down with a crash, yet it fell so squarely that neither horses, driver, wagon or load sustained any serious damage. The work of rebuilding the fallen span was at once undertaken, and the wooden arches replaced by a kind of truss work. While the repairs were being made, Samuel Downey ran a ferry to take care of the traveling public. In February, 1831, a heavy ice gorge in the river broke up and carried away all of the bridge except the new span on the New Haven side. 
(THE 3RD BRIDGE) Wooden (1832-1860)
A great improvement on the first two bridges was made in on 3 built in 1832 by the Meason and Connell heirs. The bridge was built with two spans, resting on stone abutments. and a stone pier in the river. The spans were supported by solid wooden arches and the superstructure was covered to protect it from the weather. For about twenty- eight years this bridge did duty, until April, 1860, when a great and sudden rise in the river undermined the pier and carried the whole structure away. The water rose at that time to within about two feet of the bridge floor and within a foot of the roadway on Front street, New Haven.
James H. White made two or three unsuccessful attempts to build a bent bridge of short spans during the summer and fall succeeding the flood which destroyed this bridge, but his efforts were frustrated each time by a rise in the river which carried away his bents, and finally the plan was abandoned. This work was attempted some forty or fifty feet further up the stream than the location of the last one.
The history of the old bridges is hardly complete without some mention of "Aunt Jenny" Wallace (sister of Zachariah Connell's second wife) who held the position of toll-taker for many years. She must have been a quaint character, indeed, if all the stories told about her are true. Some of these anecdotes savor much of the Stone Age, and will hardly justify repetition here. Suffice it that there were a great many jokes played upon her and she was much teased by the boys and practical jokers of that time. The bridge was hers in so far as her relations to the patrons of the bridge were concerned. She haggled for the last copper and was, from all reports an efficient and faithful guardian of her trust. One who was a boy in her time describes her as of sour visage and generally uninviting aspect, clothed in an old black dress the right side of which she would grab with her left hand and with her right plunge into the depths of her pocket to make change for a "fip."
Let us hope that her sourness of countenance was only the mask assumed to impress the flippant passengers with the importance of her trust.
(THE 4TH BRIDGE) Old Stone Suspension Bridge (1862-1898) (Photo #1)
It wasn't until 93 years later after Crawford Laid out land for New Haven. Almost a century, in 1862, that a Stone suspension bridge was finally built to connect it with her sister town of Connellsville. 
After the destruction of the third bridge, other parties made arrangements with the owners of the Meason-Connell franchise, under which a new bridge company was formed, and by act of the Legislature, passed April 17, 1861, supplementing the act of March 15, 1800, was created a body corporate under the name of the "Youghiogheny Bridge Company" with an authorized capital stock of $20,000.00, divided into eight hundred shares of the par value of $25.00 each. Stock in the new company was issued to Mrs. Mary Meason, George E. Hogg and James H. White for their property and interest in the old charter and these three were the incorporators named in the application for the new charter.
A meeting of the stockholders was held at the office of George J. Ashman, July 20, 1861, when George Nickel was elected president; George J. Ashman, secretary and treasurer, and James Wilkey, Samuel Russell, Provance McCormick, James H. White and John K. Brown, managers. A building committee composed of James H. White, George Nickel and Jonathan Hewitt was appointed by the managers, and a contract with Christian Snyder was entered into, for the erection of the stone work, on August 24, 1861. Plans were submitted by a Mr. Smith, an engineer from "down the river," for a suspension bridge. They were adopted, and work was commenced the same year and finished in the summer of 1862, at a cost of $19,600.00. The suspension cables were anchored in masonry covered with iron-two on each side of river and passed over saddles in stone towers, perhaps twenty-five feet high. From these cables, the wooden bridge was suspended.
Jonathan Hewitt resigned from the building committee at the time of letting the contract, and the work seems to have been carried on under the supervision of Nickel and White until March 11, 1862, when White resigned from the board of managers. George A. Torrence was chosen to succeed him as one of the board, and L. A. Wetherell was appointed to his place on the building committee.
-Centennial History of Connellsville
(THE 5TH BRIDGE) Steel Truss "The Free Bridge"
(1899-1958) Photo #2 & #3
In the spring of 1890 a report became current that the suspension bridge was unsafe. A committee was appointed to have an expert examination made of the property an experienced engineer was procured who submitted an exhaustive report in August of that year pronouncing the cables 
and fastenings, superstructure and all to be in excellent condition. He further suggested a plan whereby the capacity of the bridge could be increased by adding a foot-walk at the lower side this plan was adopted and the im-
provements made in the winter of 1890-91, at a cost of about $7,500.00. 
A petition was presented to the court of quarter sessions of Fayette county in November, 1890, for the appointment of appraisers to assess damages if any to the Youghiogheny Bridge Company, by virtue of their making it a free bridge. The viewers met and assessed damages, but the county authorities never acted on the matter. 
November 1, 1897, a committee of the board was ap- pointed to confer with the stockholders and consider the advisability of building a new bridge. This was finally decided upon and a contract let to the Pittsburgh Bridge Company, on July 11, 1898, for the erection of an "over- head" bridge (with reference to the B.&O. R. R. Company's Tracks and Water street). This contract was afterward amended, and new specifications submitted which were adopted October 3, 1898. The starting of the work was delayed, pending an agreement with the town council of Connellsville as to the place of landing. This was finally adjusted and an agreement entered into between the bridge company and the borough authorities on October 17, 1898. This is a lengthy document and covered all the points at difference. The Bridge Company giving a bond in the sum of $50,000.00 for faithful performance.
Within a few days from the signing of this agree- ment the work was started. This is a steel truss bridge of five spans with steel girders and beams upon which rests a floor of wood, treated with creosote and overlaid with paving brick. The structure was completed and accepted from the contractors at a meeting on November 29, 1899.
The street railway entered into a contract with the bridge company for the privilege of crossing the bridge on October 18th, 1900.
The officers and managers of the company, since May, 1904, are as follows: President, P.S. Newmyer; Treasurer, E.T. Norton; Managers, John D. Frisbee, Kell Long, Isaac F. Wilkey, Philip Wilkey and E.T. Norton.
It became known as "The Free Bridge" when it was turned over to the citizens of Connellsville and New Haven in 1907 after all bridges existing before it had served as toll bridges to travelers crossing, whether doing business between the two communities or traversing Fayette County.
(THE 6TH BRIDGE) (1959-2024) Officer McCray Robb Bridge
Unofficial Name: Death Trap 
Due to its crazy low "Guide Rails"
Photo #4 & #5 Courtesy of Dustin L. Murray 
Connellsville's Free Bridge (5th Bridge) had stood in place since 1899 when the city began exploring the possibility of replacing it first in 1953. It was officially closed May 5th, 1958 at 8:00 AM with barricade signs and detour signs for route 711 placed at each end of the bridge. After a few days of inclement weather, demolition began at the old bridge on May 10th. The contract stated this project won by the Trumbull Construction Asphalt Company would be completed in 220 days. The new bridge was opened on August 1st, 1959 with a ribbon cutting ceremony on the West Side by a state representative and on the East Side by our then mayor Robert P. McLuckey. A two day "Special Bargains" sale was celebrated by town merchants and the Molinaro Band led the first motorcade of six cars to cross the bridge. These were days full of hope for a prosperous Connellsville with the new route 119 Memorial Bridge having been completed just six years earlier on November 20th, 1953. On November 28th, 2014, Connellsville renamed the Crawford Avenue Bridge as the McCray Robb Memorial Bridge to honor our only police officer that has been shot in the line of duty after serving just three weeks on May 25th, 1882. The photos in the Crawford bridge album of the bridge barricade sign, demolition start, nearing completion and aerial view of new completed bridge were all courtesy of the Courier.
 The 6th bridge was deemed unsafe and Plans to replace it came about in 2018. It was to be replaced in 2020 But was pushed back due to covid and financial issues until it was closed in December of 2023
The story of the 7th Bridge McCray Robb Bridge Officially Open (11/11/24) @5pm!  Picture #6 (2024) is Still being Written. Mosites Construction Company did a Fabulous Job! MORE TO COME ON IT SOON! Follow For More!
Connellsville Area Historical Society shared
1
Connellsville's old suspension bridge (1862-1898) (4th Bridge) with the Connellsville Locomotive Works in the backround. (Photo #1)

2
The Connellsville "Free Bridge" (Bridge #5) was constructed in 1898 (Replaced in 1958) to replace the limited capacity of the suspension bridge before it. It was turned over to the citizens of Connellsville and New Haven in 1907 after all bridges existing before it had served as toll bridges to travelers crossing, whether doing business between the two communities or traversing Fayette County between Uniontown and Greensburg. Notice the train curtains hanging above the tracks in the first photo to warn train engineers of bridge clearance. Courtesy of Connellsville’s own Byron Porter.

3
Found this old post card view of the (5th Bridge) "The Free Bridge" Crawford Avenue to the west side (Main Street and New Haven once) bridge on Ebay. notice their note written in the upper right corner how they remember the bridge as "torn down in 1953"? Those trolleys would not be rolling much longer. The busy men heading up the Water Street stairs from the train station.
(1899-1958)
It became known as "The Free Bridge" when it was turned over to the citizens of Connellsville and New Haven in 1907 after all bridges existing before it had served as toll bridges to travelers crossing, whether doing business between the two communities or traversing Fayette County.

4
(THE 6TH BRIDGE) 1959-2024 McCray Robb Bridge
Unofficial Name: Death Trap
Due to its crazy low "Guide Rails"
Photo #4 Courtesy: Dustin L. Murray

5
(THE 6TH BRIDGE) 1959-2024 McCray Robb Bridge
Unofficial Name: Death Trap
Due to its crazy low "Guide Rails"
Photo #4 Courtesy: Dustin L. Murray

6
The 6th Crawford bridge was deemed unsafe and Plans to replace it came about in 2018. It was to be replaced in 2020 But was pushed back due to covid and financial issues until it was closed in December of 2023.
Picture taken (11/11/24) C.A.H.S. MEDIA
The story of the 7th Bridge McCray Robb Bridge Officially Open (11/11/24) @5pm! Picture #6 (2024) is Still being Written. MORE TO COME ON IT SOON! Follow For More!