General Information
Project Type
Structure: |
Deck arch bridge |
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Function / usage: |
Road bridge |
Material: |
Iron bridge |
Plan view: |
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Awards and Distinctions
1978 |
for registered users |
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Location
Location: |
Brownsville, Fayette County, Pennsylvania, USA |
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Crosses: |
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Coordinates: | 40° 1' 17.58" N 79° 53' 16.78" W |
Technical Information
Dimensions
arches | arch span | 24.4 m |
Materials
arches |
cast iron
|
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Excerpt from Wikipedia
Dunlap's Creek Bridge was the first arch bridge in the United States built of cast iron. It was designed by Richard Delafield and built by the United States Army Corps of Engineers. Constructed from 1836 to 1839 on the National Road in Brownsville, Pennsylvania, it remains in use today. It is listed on the National Register of Historic Places and is a National Historic Civil Engineering Landmark (1978). It is located in the Brownsville Commercial Historic District and supports Market Street, the local main thoroughfare. Due to the steep sides of the Monongahela River valley, there is only room for two short streets parallel to the river's shore and graded mild enough to be comfortable to walk before the terrain rises too steeply for business traffic.
View of the once vibrant business strip, the Market Street historic district. Market Street's lowest stretch runs north of the ramp off the West Brownsville bridge for 3-4 blocks (about the scene here), whereafter it begins a steady climb to the end of the re-routed U.S. Route 40 bridge built at a much higher elevation near the site of the original settlement, the Tavern, Trading Post, and Inn near today's Bowman's Castle. Plaque commemorating the first cast iron bridge built in the United States. This plaque is near or at the place the above picture of the Market Street was taken.
History
There have been four structures on this site. The first two collapsed in 1808 and 1820. The third, a wood-framed structure, needed replacement by 1832.
This bridge is constructed using five parallel tubular ribs, each made of 9 elliptical segments to form the 80 feet (24 m) arch.
Text imported from Wikipedia article "Dunlap''s Creek Bridge" and modified on March 3, 2023 according to the CC-BY-SA 4.0 International license.
Participants
Relevant Web Sites
Relevant Publications
- Assembling the Cast: The Dunlap's Creek Bridge. In: Civil Engineering Magazine, v. 79, n. 6 (June 2009), pp. 36-37. (2009):
- Bridge Engineering Handbook. CRC Press, Boca Raton (USA), pp. 67-6. (1999):
- Great American Bridges and Dams. A National Trust Guide. John Wiley & Sons, New York (USA), pp. 142. (1984):
- About this
data sheet - Structure-ID
20001294 - Published on:
10/02/2001 - Last updated on:
14/02/2023