Queen Street Viaduct

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The Queen Street Bridge today
The bridge under construction in 1911

The Queen Street Viaduct (usually known as the Queen Street Bridge) in Toronto, Canada carries vehicles and Toronto Transit Commission streetcars along Queen Street East and across the Don River. It is an example of a Pratt truss.

History

The bridge is at least the third bridge over the Don River at this location, the first operated by the Scadding family in the early 1800s (One of the early bridges was a wooden bridge built in 1803.[1]) The previous bridges were closer to the level of the river bank below.

The current steel Truss bridge was built in 1911. It was higher in elevation than previous bridges at the location and streets on each side of the river were graded higher to meet the level of the bridge. The construction of this bridge eliminated a grade-level railway crossing on the west bank of the river.

The bridge was renovated in the 1990s and public art was added. At the top of the western side of the bridge is a piece of public art created in 1996 by Eldon Garnet. It consisted of a clock, which ceased to work and the mechanism and hands were removed in 2010, with the phrase "this river I step in is not the river I stand in" written in large letters. There are also three metal "banners."

The bridge is one of a few steel Truss bridges in the city:

  • Old Eastern Avenue Bridge – unused bridge crossing the Don River
  • Bathurst Street Bridge – recycled bridge used on the Lakeshore
  • Tywn River Drive Bridge – a minor bridge crossing the Rouge River
  • Lawrence Avenue Bridge – former bridge that took traffic over Don River replaced by current overpass in the 1960s

References

External links

Coordinates: 43°39′29″N 79°21′14″W / 43.658°N 79.354°W / 43.658; -79.354

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