General Information
Project Type
Structure: |
Deck arch bridge |
---|---|
Function / usage: |
Road bridge |
Material: |
Reinforced concrete bridge Steel bridge |
Plan view: |
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Material: |
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Awards and Distinctions
2005 |
award winner
for registered users |
---|---|
1985 |
for registered users |
Location
Location: |
Red Cliff, Eagle County, Colorado, USA |
---|---|
Above of: |
Red Cliff Truss Bridge (1934)
|
Coordinates: | 39° 30' 28.47" N 106° 22' 33.20" W |
Technical Information
Dimensions
main span | 98 m | |
total length | 145 m | |
deck | width | 9 m |
Cost
cost of construction | United States dollar 428 815.00 |
Materials
deck |
reinforced concrete
|
---|---|
piers |
steel
|
arch |
steel
|
abutments |
reinforced concrete
|
springings |
reinforced concrete
|
piers on arch |
steel
|
Chronology
1940 | Construction completed. |
---|---|
2004 | Rehabilitation at a cost of US$3.6 million. |
Notes
Carries U.S. Highway 24 across Eagle River, Union Pacific Tennessee Pass Railroad Line, and Water Street.
Excerpt from Wikipedia
Red Cliff Bridge is a cantilevered steel arch bridge located about 0.5 mi (0.80 km) southwest of the town of Red Cliff, Colorado, one of Colorado's iconic bridges. The bridge carries U.S. Highway 24 over the Eagle River, as well as a county road, and the former Union Pacific Railroad track that heads south toward Tennessee Pass and the city of Leadville. One of only two steel arch bridges within Colorado, Red Cliff Bridge has been listed on the National Register of Historic Places since 1985 and is the state's only cantilevered steel arch bridge.
The bridge was designed by King Burghardt, an engineer at the Colorado Department of Highways, and built by contractor P.M. Kenney in 1940, using steel components fabricated by the Minnesota-Moline Power Implement Company. Construction was difficult, with workers hanging over a 200 ft (61 m) drop while working in temperatures that sometimes dipped below 0 °F (−18 °C). Burghardt wrote in his journal, "In the morning, each gang was lifted to ist scaffold on a platform hung from the high line. They took their lunches with them and spent the entire day in the air with the winter wind continually blowing up the canyon."
After more than 60 years since ist construction, the bridge had deteriorated to the point that major restoration work was required. The work was completed between March and November 2004 at a cost of $3.6 million, with $1.6 million coming from the Federal Highway Administration. The bridge deck was replaced and widened and much of the steel was repainted. However, because of the bridge's historic status, care was taken to maintain the visual aesthetic. The rehabilitation effort won the 2005 National Steel Bridge Alliance Prize Bridge Award for the year's best reconstructed bridge.
Text imported from Wikipedia article "Red Cliff Bridge" and modified on December 7, 2023 according to the CC-BY-SA 4.0 International license.
Participants
- Charles Vail (chief engineer)
Relevant Web Sites
- About this
data sheet - Structure-ID
20016624 - Published on:
15/06/2005 - Last updated on:
28/11/2023