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General Information

Completion: 1908
Status: in use

Project Type

Function / usage: Railroad (railway) bridge
Material: Steel bridge
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Support conditions:
Structure: approach viaducts:
Girder bridge
swing span:
Swing bridge
swing span:
Polygonal truss bridge
swing span:
Through truss bridge

Location

Location: , , ,
, , ,
Crosses:
  • Raritan River
Will be replaced by: Raritan Bay Bridge (2026)
Coordinates: 40° 29' 47.17" N    74° 16' 50.64" W
Show coordinates on a map

Technical Information

Dimensions

main span 101 m

Materials

girders steel

Excerpt from Wikipedia

The Raritan Bay Drawbridge, also known as River-Draw, Raritan Bay Swing Bridge, and Raritan River Railroad Bridge, is a railroad swing bridge crossing the Raritan River 0.5 miles (0.8 km) from where it empties into the Raritan Bay in Middlesex County, New Jersey, United States. It connects Perth Amboy to the north and South Amboy to the south.

History

The bridge was built in 1908 to replace one that had been built at the crossing in 1875 to serve the New York and Long Branch Railroad, jointly operated by the Central Railroad of New Jersey (CNJ) and Pennsylvania Railroad (PRR). Near the end of its construction, the bridge was sabotaged by a dynamite blast. A few years after completion, the bridge was damaged in a severe winter storm. The bridge has been owned by several different parties since the CNJ/PRR era: Penn Central (1968–1971), the New Jersey Department of Transportation (to 1983), and New Jersey Transit (NJT).

Operations

The bridge is used by NJT commuter rail on its North Jersey Coast Line and for Conrail-Norfolk Southern rail freight operations. Federal regulations require the bridge to be open on signal except during rush hour or when a train has passed the home signal for it.

Replacement

The bridge was scheduled to be replaced after suffering structural damage from Hurricane Sandy in 2012. The bridge was overwashed by the storm surge, struck by two tugboats, and had to be realigned before low-speed service could resume a month later. A $446 million federal grant, announced in 2014, will fund construction of a new bridge while trains continue using the existing bridge. A groundbreaking ceremony was held September 15, 2020, with completion projected for 2026.

Text imported from Wikipedia article "Raritan Bay Drawbridge" and modified on February 10, 2023 according to the CC-BY-SA 4.0 International license.

Participants

Steel construction

Relevant Web Sites

  • About this
    data sheet
  • Structure-ID
    20051039
  • Published on:
    30/12/2009
  • Last updated on:
    07/02/2023
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