Clark Bridge

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Clark Bridge

View from West Alton, MO
Other name(s) Clark Superbridge
Carries 4 lanes of US 67
Crosses Mississippi River
Locale West Alton, Missouri and Alton, Illinois
Design Cable-stayed bridge
Total length 4,620 feet (1,408 m)
Longest span 756 feet (230 m)
Opened January 1994
Coordinates 38°52′56″N 90°10′44″W / 38.88222°N 90.17889°W / 38.88222; -90.17889

The Clark Bridge is a cable-stayed bridge across the Mississippi River between West Alton, Missouri and Alton, Illinois. Named after explorer William Clark like the bridge it replaced, the cable-stayed bridge opened in 1994. It carries U.S. Route 67 across the river. It is the northernmost river crossing in the Saint Louis metropolitan area.

The new $85 million, 108-foot-wide bridge (33 m) replaced the old Clark Bridge, which was only 20 ft wide (6.1 m).[1] The truss bridge was built in 1928. The new bridge carries two lanes of divided traffic in each direction, as well as two bike lanes. The old bridge carried only two lanes (similar to the upstream Champ Clark Bridge).

The bridge is sometimes referred to as the Super Bridge. Its construction was featured in a NOVA documentary entitled Super Bridge, which highlighted the challenges of building the bridge, especially during the Great Flood of 1993. Designed by Hanson Engineers under contract to Illinois Department of Transportation (DOT), the Clark Bridge was the first in the United States in which "such a light steel-framed cable-stayed design was combined with a cable saddle type of pylon."[2] The bridge used 8,100 tons of structural steel; 44,100 cubic yards of concrete; and more than 160 miles of cable wrapped with four acres of yellow plastic piping.[3]

See also

References

  1. David Goodyear and Ralph Salamie, "The Clark Bridge", Civil Engineering, August 1994, accessed 4 August 2009
  2. David Goodyear and Ralph Salamie, "The Clark Bridge", Civil Engineering, August 1994, accessed 4 August 2009
  3. "Clark Bridge - Alton, Illinois", Alton Web, accessed 4 August 2009

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike; additional terms may apply for the media files.