Ambridge-Aliquippa Bridge
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Carries | 2 lanes of roadway |
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Crosses | Ohio River |
Locale | Ambridge, Pennsylvania |
Design | Steel cantilever bridge |
Total length | 1,500 feet |
Opening date | 1926 |
The Ambridge-Aliquippa Bridge is a steel cantilever through truss bridge which crosses the Ohio River at Ambridge, Pennsylvania. The bridge was originally named the Woodlawn-Ambridge Bridge but soon became the Ambridge-Aliquippa when Woodland was eclipsed by the rapid expansion of the Aliquippa Works of the Jones & Laughlin Steel Company.
The American Bridge Company completed dozens bridges in 1926. The last one, opened to the public on December 28th, was a standard of what was being built all over the United States in the 1920’s. It was ordinary in every way except for one: the shortest distance hauled from factory to construction site.
When the Woodlawn-Ambridge Bridge opened to the public that winter, the local paper reported the usual fanfare, commemorations, and even an “aerial bombardment”. The extreme convenience of building a bridge with one end in a steel plant and the other in the bridge company’s fabrication yard was duly noted. Local supporters claimed, “Only the paint had to be brought in”. Even the gravel and sand for the piers were excavated from the river.
In September of 1924, the plans for a bridge over the Ohio River linking Ambridge and Woodlawn were revived from earlier ones shelved in 1917 by the outbreak of the First World War. The need for a bridge was beyond doubt and long overdue as the towns of Ambridge and Woodlawn, which had populations in the hundreds at the turn of the century, exceeded 40,000 by the late 1920’s.
A bond issue for $1.5 million was submitted to county voters and passed in November of 1924. In January of 1925 the county commissioners petitioned the court and the grand jury for authority to build the bridge and later that month made application to congress for authority to bridge the Ohio. Dravo Contracting submitted the low bid of $144,000 to construct four piers completed on August 13, 1926 one month ahead of schedule. The steel was supplied by the Aliquippa Works for $609,000. The American Bridge Company charged $337,500. Pittsburgh and Lake Erie Railroad, which later became Conrail and CSX, paid $39,000 for the portion over its tracks. The total cost with approaches was $1.25 million - completed in record time and within estimates.
The Ambridge-Aliquippa Bridge’s cantilevered trusses are made from riveted steel, a design favored from the 1920’s through the 1970’s for crossings with 600 to 1,400 foot main spans. In addition to the Ohio River and two railways, the bridge crosses two main highways making the full length 1,908 feet excluding the end spans.
Thousands of bridges very similar were built across the US during that time, especially in the eastern US. Contemporaries constructed by the American Bridge Company include the Louisville Municipal Bridge in 1929 with a 820 foot main span, the Huey P. Long Bridge in New Orleans built in 1935 with a 790 foot main span, and the East Bay Bridge of the San Francisco Oakland Bay Bridge built in 1937 with a 1,400 foot main span. The first Carquinez Strait Bridge in Vallejo, CA, built in 1927, was a back-to-back 1,100 foot cantilevered truss.
[edit] See also
[edit] External links
Bridges of the Ohio River | |||
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Upstream Sewickley Bridge |
Ambridge-Aliquippa Bridge |
Downstream Monaca-East Rochester Bridge SR 51 |