Beaver Bridge (Ohio River) Explained

Bridge Name:Beaver Bridge
Carries:Two tracks of CSX Transportation.
Crosses:Ohio River
Locale:Monaca, Pennsylvania and Beaver, Pennsylvania
Design:Cantilever through truss bridge
Coordinates:40.6929°N -80.2908°W

The Beaver Bridge is a rail bridge spanning the Ohio River between Monaca and Beaver, Pennsylvania. It consists of two spans: a southern cantilever through truss of 769feet with 320feet anchor arms; and a northern camelback through truss of 370feet. The bridge currently carries two tracks of CSX Transportation.

The bridge was designed by Albert Lucius and built by McClintic-Marshall Company of Pittsburgh between March 1908 and May 1910 for the Pittsburgh and Lake Erie Railroad. The bridge is notable in that the railroad proceeded with the cantilever design despite the collapse of the Quebec cantilever bridge during construction in 1907. The Beaver bridge replaced a single-track bridge built in 1890, 300feet downstream from the current bridge's position, which itself replaced an 1878 wrought iron bridge at the same location.

See also

References

External links