Upper Hack Lift
Upper Hack Lift | |
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Upper Hack Lift from Secaucus bank of Hackensack River | |
Coordinates | 40°46′41″N 74°05′24″W / 40.778015°N 74.089906°WCoordinates: 40°46′41″N 74°05′24″W / 40.778015°N 74.089906°W |
Carries | One track of NJ Transit Main Line |
Crosses | Hackensack River |
Locale | Secaucus and Lyndhurst, New Jersey |
Official name | Upper Hack Bridge |
Other name(s) | Upper Hackensack Lift, Erie Lift, West Secaucus Bridge |
Maintained by | NJ Transit |
Characteristics | |
Design | Lift bridge |
Longest span | 127 feet |
Clearance below | 8 ft (lowered); 110 ft (raised) |
History | |
Opened | March 1959 |
Upper Hack Lift |
Upper Hack Lift is a lift bridge carrying the New Jersey Transit Main Line across the Hackensack River at mile 6.9 between Secaucus, New Jersey and Lyndhurst.
It was built by the Delaware, Lackawanna and Western Railroad in 1958 and completed in March 1959 to serve the Boonton Line and replaced an older swing span from 1901 on the site, which had been damaged by shifting currents. The new single-track lift bridge cost $5,500,000 [1]
Following a 1963 route realignment, Erie Main Line service began using the bridge. It was repainted in 1994 to its current turquoise blue color.
Upper Hack is the only single-track lift bridge in New Jersey. It is visible to motorists on the New Jersey Turnpike's western spur between Interchanges 15W and 16W.
Remnants of the older swing span are visible just to the north of the current lift span, as concrete abutments and piers remain.[2]
The current drawbridge schedule at Upper Hack (as stated by US Coast Guard, 33 CFR 117.723) allows the bridge to open on signal unless the bridge tender is at the nearby HX Draw on the Bergen County Line upstream.[3]
See also
- List of crossings of the Hackensack River
- List of bridges, tunnels, and cuts in Hudson County, New Jersey
- NJT movable bridges
- Hackensack RiverWalk
- Timeline of Jersey City area railroads
References
- ↑ Taber, Thomas Townsend Townsend and Thomas Townsend Taber III. The Delaware, Lackawanna and Western Railroad in the Twentieth Century (two volumes) Muncy PA, 1981. 139
- ↑ Wong, Kevin (1999). "Abutment for former Lackawanna swing span by Upper Hack." Photograph.
- ↑ (2)
External links
- Movable Railroad Bridges of New Jersey-photo catalog
- Movable Railroad Bridges of New Jersey
- Upper Hack Lift photo gallery
- U.S. Government Printing Office: DRAWBRIDGE OPERATION REGULATIONS-Hackensack River (Code of Federal Regulations 33 CFR 117.723)
- Erie Lift (Upper Hack) photos and notes
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