General Information
Other name(s): | Nello Irwin Greer Memorial Bridge |
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Completion: | 1974 |
Status: | in use |
Project Type
Function / usage: |
Motorway bridge / freeway bridge |
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Structure: |
Single-cell box girder bridge |
Construction method: |
Precast segmental construction |
Material: |
Prestressed concrete bridge |
Location
Location: |
Pine Valley, San Diego County, California, USA |
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Carries: |
|
Part of: | |
Coordinates: | 32° 49' 23.13" N 116° 33' 35.86" W |
Technical Information
Dimensions
span lengths | 77.7 m - 103.6 m - 137.2 m - 115.8 m - 81.1 m | |
number of spans | 5 | |
height above valley floor or water | 137.16 m | |
deck | deck depth | 5.8 m |
deck width | 2 x 12.8 m | |
deck slab thickness | 0.20 - 0.40 m | |
web thickness | 0.40 m | |
thickness of bottom flange | 0.30 m | |
Northern bridge | ||
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total length | 515.4 m | |
Southern bridge | ||
total length | 530.7 m |
Materials
deck |
precast prestressed concrete
|
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Excerpt from Wikipedia
The Pine Valley Creek Bridge, officially named the Nello Irwin Greer Memorial Bridge, is a reinforced concrete box girder bridge in San Diego County, California near the town of Pine Valley. The bridge was built in 1974 as part of the Interstate 8 (I-8) freeway system. At the time of its construction, it was the first bridge constructed in the United States using the segmental balanced cantilever method. The northern span is 1,691 ft (515.4 m) long while the southern span is 1,741 ft (530.7 m) long. The two spans rise 450 ft (137.2 m) above the valley floor, placing Pine Valley Creek Bridge among the highest bridges in the United States.
Originally known unofficially as the Pine Valley Creek Bridge, a California State Senate concurrent resolution (SCR-33) officially named the bridge in honor of the project engineer, Nello Irwin Greer, responsible for designing the section of I-8 known as the "Pine Valley Project".
In the original design, the freeway's routing followed the old U.S. Route 80 (US 80) path through the center of the town of Pine Valley. This would have destroyed much of the town and many of the native pines found there. Greer's design re-routed the freeway to the south, bypassing and preserving the quaint beauty of this eastern San Diego County mountain community. This new design also saved 2 miles (3.2 km) of freeway construction, saving millions of dollars in costs. However this re-routing of the freeway mandated the crossing of the Pine Valley Creek Canyon. The bridge that now bears Greer's name was the design answer to that engineering hurdle.
Text imported from Wikipedia article "Pine Valley Creek Bridge" and modified on July 23, 2019 according to the CC-BY-SA 4.0 International license.
Participants
-
California Department of Transportation
- Bert Bezzone (design engineer)
-
Dyckerhoff & Widmann AG
- Man-Chung Tang (designer)
Relevant Web Sites
Relevant Publications
- Bridge Engineering Handbook. CRC Press, Boca Raton (USA), pp. 67-46. (1999):
- (2014): The Story of the Koror Bridge. International Association for Bridge and Structural Engineering (IABSE), Zurich (Switzerland), ISBN 978-3-85748-136-9, pp. 78-80.
- About this
data sheet - Structure-ID
20019503 - Published on:
13/02/2006 - Last updated on:
05/02/2016