Railroad: (Bridge Hunter; Historic Bridges; Flickrs: Todd, Greg; Satellite)
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Josh Schmid, License: Creative Commons Attribution-Share-Alike (CC BY-SA) View from northwest |
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Josh Schmid, License: Creative Commons Attribution-Share-Alike (CC BY-SA) Partially open bridge from northwest |
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Harish Mukundan |
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(Update: The 1911 Bridge Hunter page for the Duwamish River Bridge was my source concerning Strauss' earlier design.)
The railroad bridge may have been owned by a terminal railroad that allowed NYC, NKP and Pennsy to access the ore docks. The bridge is an early Strauss heel-trunnion design. And, unlike other early designs I have seen, this 1911 bridge has not been converted to Strauss' later design. This early design has the machinery room on top of the movable span and the operating strut is fixed to the counterweight tower. By 1919, Strauss had moved the machinery room to the counterweight tower and fixed the operating strut to the movable span. Below is a closeup of the two bridges on the South Branch of the Chicago River that have the modern design. I highlighted the operating strut of the near bridge, which is closed, in red and the strut of the far bridge, which is open, in yellow. You can see that the strut comes out the back of the tower as the bridge is raised. That photo allows you to compare the modern design with the earlier design still used in this bridge.
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20150513 1427, cropped plus Paint |
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Bridge Hunter plus Paint |
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Bridge Hunter plus Paint |
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Bridge Hunter plus Paint |
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Walter Gunter posted N&S Drawbridge. Ashtabula harbor. N.E. Ohio. Walter Gunter ![]() |
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