Bodine's Bridge

Bodine's Bridge

Bridge seen from western bank, looking downstream
Coordinates 41°30′09″N 74°15′50″W / 41.50250°N 74.26389°WCoordinates: 41°30′09″N 74°15′50″W / 41.50250°N 74.26389°W
Carries Two lanes of NY 211
Crosses Wallkill River
Locale Town of Montgomery, NY
Maintained by New York State Department of Transportation
ID number 000000001040980
Characteristics
Design Through truss
Total length 340 feet (103 m)[1]
Width 24 feet (7.3 m)[1]
Load limit 30 tons (27.2 tonnes)[1]
History
Opened 1933[1]
Statistics
Daily traffic 6,035[1]

Bodine's Bridge and vicinity

Bodine's Bridge carries NY 211 across the Wallkill River, a mile (1.6 km) south (west by the highway's signed direction) of the village of Montgomery, New York, USA, near Orange County Airport.[1] At 340 feet (103 m) in length,[1] the steel through truss is the longest bridge along Route 211.

The current bridge was built in 1933, and reconstructed in 1970.[1] It took its name from its predecessors, which in turn were named after nearby, still-standing Bodine's Tavern, a popular rest stop on the early 19th century Minisink to Montgomery Turnpike, which later became Route 211. The house was built near a popular ford along the river, which the bridges were built over.

Due to the bridge's location in the river's flood plain, it is often closed after heavy rains when its approaches, particularly to the south, are overrun by rising waters. This happened most recently during the April 2007 Nor'easter.[2]

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 1.6 1.7 National Bridge Inventory, Record #000000001040980, accessed at nationalbridges.com July 10, 2007.
  2. "Flood Watch Downgraded to Flood Warning and List of Road Closures" (Press release). Orange County. 2007-04-16. 'Route 211 and E Kaisertown', 'Canning Road and Route 416' . These two sections are the nearest intersections to the bridge on either side.