Bridge Name: | Ronald Kirk Pedestrian Bridge | ||||||||||
Coordinates: | 32.7809°N -96.8228°W | ||||||||||
Official Name: | Ronald Kirk Bridge | ||||||||||
Other Name: | Lamar-McKinney Viaduct, Continental Avenue Bridge | ||||||||||
Carries: | Pedestrians (since June 15, 2014) | ||||||||||
Crosses: | Trinity River | ||||||||||
Locale: | Continental Avenue in Dallas, Texas | ||||||||||
Named For: | Ron Kirk | ||||||||||
Owner: | City of Dallas | ||||||||||
Designer: | Francis Dey Hughes | ||||||||||
Design: | Multi-span plate girder bridge | ||||||||||
Material: | concrete, steel | ||||||||||
Spans: | 43 | ||||||||||
Builder: | L. H. Lay Company | ||||||||||
Closed: | (vehicular) | ||||||||||
Replaced By: | Margaret Hunt Hill Bridge (vehicular) | ||||||||||
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The Ronald Kirk Bridge is a pedestrian bridge over the Trinity River in Dallas, Texas. It connects Downtown Dallas and West Dallas, paralleling the 2012 Margaret Hunt Hill Bridge for vehicles, and the 1930 Texas and Pacific Railway Trinity River Bridge.
Constructed as the Lamar-McKinney Viaduct in 1933, the original road bridge was built to carry vehicles across the periodically swelling Trinity River to West Dallas. It was completed 27 years after the river's 1908 flood that submerged most of the area.
The bridge was renamed the Ronald Kirk Bridge in 2016 from its former name, the Continental Avenue Bridge. It was renamed in honor of the first African-American mayor of Dallas, Ronald Kirk.[2]
The bridge had fallen into a state of disrepair by 2010, when plans were being developed to reconstruct Continental Avenue and the bridge. During the reconstruction of the bridge it was decided that there was no need for it to carry vehicular traffic, since the nearby Margaret Hunt Hill Bridge was completed in 2012 to do so. The design as a footbridge complemented the nearby open park plan for Klyde Warren Park, as a recreation amenity.[3]
The Ronald Kirk Bridge reopened on Sunday, June 15, 2014 (Father's Day). It opened with a playground, a splash park, lounge chairs, human-sized chess boards, and a ceiling of cloth to shade the area, along with many trails surrounding the bridge in the Trinity River Basin and on the levees.[4]
This bridge is part of the greater Trinity River Project.[5]