Canal Street railroad bridge explained

Bridge Name:Canal Street railroad bridge
Official Name:Pennsylvania Railroad Bridge #458
Canal Street Railroad Bridge
Other Name:21st Street Bridge
Owner:Amtrak[1]
Carries:Amtrak, Metra, and freight trains
Crosses:Chicago River
Locale:Chicago
Num Track:2
Designer:Waddell & Harrington
Design:vertical-lift bridge
Mainspan:272.8feet[2]
Traffic:Nearly 100 trains[3]
Begin:September 4, 1913[4]
Complete:July 30, 1914
Heritage:Chicago Landmark
Coordinates:41.8556°N -87.637°W

The Canal Street railroad bridge (or Pennsylvania Railroad bridge) is a vertical-lift bridge across the south branch of the Chicago River in Chicago, Illinois. It was designated a Chicago Landmark on December 12, 2007.[5]

Construction

The present bridge was constructed for the Pennsylvania Railroad to replace a two-track swing bridge at the same location. The necessity to allow both continued use of the swing bridge and unimpeded river traffic during building work complicated construction of the bridge. The chosen solution was to construct the bridge in the raised position above the old bridge, then demolish the old bridge once construction was completed. The bridge was designed by Waddell & Harrington, and fabricated and erected by the Pennsylvania Steel Company.

Construction of the south tower began on September 4, 1913. When the two 185feet towers were completed, falsework for the main span was constructed in a fan shape that allowed the main span to be constructed in the raised position 130feet above the river. The bridge was built from steel and metal.

Operation

The bridge carries two railroad tracks across the Chicago River at an angle of about 40 degrees to the center line of the river. Upon completion, the main span could be raised 111feet in about 45 seconds. By 1916, each day the bridge was crossed by about 300 trains, and was raised for river traffic about 75 times.[6]

There are proposals for an additional or replacement bridge at Canal Street to support the full high-speed, high-frequency build out of the St. Louis-Chicago Lincoln Service passenger rail line.[3] [7]

Trivia

When it was constructed in 1914, its 1500-ton main span was the heaviest of any vertical lift bridge in the United States.[8] It is the only vertical-lift bridge across the Chicago River.

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: High Speed Rail Alliance . September 20, 2023 . Amtrak’s 21st Street bridge needs replaced . April 2, 2024.
  2. Web site: Holth . Nathan . Canal Street Railroad Bridge . 2009-04-30 . Historic Bridges of Michigan and Elsewhere . https://web.archive.org/web/20090328023410/http://www.historicbridges.org/illinois/sblift/index.htm . 2009-03-28 . dead .
  3. . . Tier 1 Final Environmental Impact Statement: Chicago to St. Louis High-Speed Rail Program . https://railroads.dot.gov/elibrary/chicago-st-louis-volume-i-section-7-implementation-plan . Section 7: Implementation plan . October 31, 2012 . 7–5, 7–6.
  4. Smith . W. L. . Priest . W. W. . 1915 . The Design and Erection of the Pennsylvania Lift Bridge No. 458 Over the South Branch of the Chicago River . Journal of the Western Society of Engineers . Western Society of Engineers . Chicago, IL . XX . 478–500 . 2009-04-30.
  5. Web site: Chicago Landmarks: Individual Landmarks and Landmark Districts designated as of January 1, 2008. Commission on Chicago Landmarks. 2008-01-01. 2009-05-01. https://web.archive.org/web/20080227233712/http://www.tonythetiger.frih.net/CCL_Booklet_1-1-08.pdf#. 2008-02-27. dead.
  6. Book: Waddell, James Alexander Low. Bridge Engineering. John Wiley & Sons Inc. New York. 1916. 1. 734. 2009-04-30.
  7. . 2023 Illinois state rail plan: Final report . https://idot.illinois.gov/content/dam/soi/en/web/idot/documents/transportation-system/fact-sheets/2023%20Illinois%20State%20Rail%20Plan%20Main%20Document.pdf#page=125 . 3–8 . Chicago – St. Louis: Full build out.
  8. Web site: Pennsylvania Railroad, South Branch Chicago River Bridge. Fitzsimons. Gray. 1992. Historic American Engineering Record. Library of Congress. Washington, D.C.. 1. https://web.archive.org/web/20140508042914/http://lcweb2.loc.gov/pnp/habshaer/il/il0700/il0706/data/il0706data.pdf. 2014-05-08. Nicolay. John. Brucken. Carolyn. Alexander. Frances. 2014-05-07.