Rock O' the Range Bridge explained

Bridge Name:Rock O' the Range Bridge
Carries:Bowery Lane
Crosses:Swalley Canal
Maint:Local Homeowners
Design:Covered
Length:42feet
Clearance:12.3feet
Builder:Maurice Olson
Complete:1963[1]
Coordinates:44.1223°N -121.2869°W
Extra:
Embed:yes
Rock O' the Range Bridge
Architecture:King Post Truss
Added:29 November 1979
Refnum:79002054

The Rock O' the Range Bridge, also called the Swalley Canal Bridge, is a bridge located north of Bend, Oregon, U.S., on a street adjacent to U.S. Route 97. It is the only covered span in the state of Oregon on the east side of the Cascade Range. It is also one of very few privately owned covered bridges in Oregon.[2]

History

William Bowen, a proprietor of land north of Bend, was forced to build an access road across the Swalley Canal to access his property. His bridge was inspired by the Goodpasture Bridge in Lane County. Bowen hired Maurice Olson to build the bridge; it was finished in 1963 for $4500 ($ in).

High loads have damaged the portal boards and roof braces, due to an unusually short 9feet clearance.

Controversy

Though the Rock O' The Range Bridge has a roof on it, it is technically not a covered bridge according to the World Guide because it is not supported by a truss.[2] [3] [4] The World Guide appended a letter to the identification number to make it unique to other covered bridges.

Because of its small size and safety hazard, the bridge is denied maintenance by Deschutes County. Upkeep is performed by homeowners using the bridge.[3]

See also

Notes and References

  1. News: The bridges in our own back yard . Eugene Register-Guard . 8 July 2001 . 30 April 2015 . Young, Amalie . 3H.
  2. Web site: Oregon Covered Bridges - Rock O' the Range Bridge, Deschutes County OR. Oregon Travels Visitors Guide. 31 August 2011. Talent, Oregon.
  3. Web site: Rock O' the Range Bridge. Comcast. 31 August 2011.
  4. Web site: Swalley Canal (Rock O' The Range) Covered Bridge. Oregon Department of Transportation. State of Oregon. 31 August 2011.