General Information
Project Type
Structure: |
Three-span suspension bridge |
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Function / usage: |
Road bridge |
Material: |
Steel bridge Structurae Plus/Pro - Subscribe Now! Structurae Plus/Pro - Subscribe Now! |
Secondary structure(s): |
Structurae Plus/Pro - Subscribe Now! |
Awards and Distinctions
1990 |
for registered users |
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Location
Location: |
Beaver, Carroll County, Arkansas, USA |
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Address: | AK 187 |
Crosses: |
|
Coordinates: | 36° 28' 18.25" N 93° 46' 6.70" W |
Technical Information
Dimensions
main span | 95.0976 m | |
total length | ca. 168.9202 m | |
clearance | 4.2 m | |
number of spans | 3 | |
number of lanes | 1 | |
deck | width | 3.4 m |
piers | number | 2 |
pylons | number | 2 |
Materials
cables |
steel wire
|
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pylons |
steel
|
deck flooring |
timber
|
Chronology
ca. 1980 | Major renovation. |
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Excerpt from Wikipedia
The Beaver Bridge in Beaver, Arkansas, is a historic one-lane suspension bridge carrying Arkansas Highway 187 over the White River at Table Rock Lake. Built in 1949 by the Pioneer Construction Company, the structure is the only suspension bridge open to traffic in Arkansas. The Beaver Bridge was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1990.
History
The bridge was bid on December 19, 1947, to Pioneer Construction Company of Malvern, Arkansas. The construction foreman who led the project was M. R. Blair (1914-2014), who later served as lead foreman on numerous bridge and highway projects across Arkansas, Missouri, and Tennessee, and who led the construction of numerous dams, highways and bridges throughout the southwestern United States, including the 1964 Big I interchange of Interstates 25 and 40 in Albuquerque, New Mexico. Remarkably, Blair and his team completed the project without the benefit of an industrial crane, using only a pickup-mounted, knuckle-boom type crane.
Since the construction was coincident with the building of Table Rock Dam, completion was delayed until 1949 as the United States Army Corps of Engineers required the bridge to be raised 40 feet (12 m). Upon completion, the bridge remained a vital link for the citizens of Beaver until its closure for major deck rehabilitation in 1981. Further rehabilitation occurred in 2003. The bridge has a 10-ton weight limit. The bridge was temporarily closed for inspection in October 2018 after two overweight buses crossed it.
Text imported from Wikipedia article "Beaver Bridge (Arkansas)" and modified on January 11, 2024 according to the CC-BY-SA 4.0 International license.
Participants
Relevant Web Sites
- About this
data sheet - Structure-ID
20012249 - Published on:
08/06/2004 - Last updated on:
27/12/2023