Bridge Name: | Strawberry Mansion Bridge |
Official Name: | Strawberry Mansion Bridge |
Also Known As: | Park Trolley Bridge |
Carries: | Strawberry Mansion Drive |
Crosses: | Schuylkill River, Schuylkill River Trail, Kelly Drive, Martin Luther King Drive |
Locale: | Fairmount Park, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania |
Design: | Steel arch |
Mainspan: | 200.1feet |
Length: | 1242.2feet |
Width: | 80feet roadway, originally 40feet), currently 32.2feet); pedestrian walk 12feet; former trolley right-of-way 28feet |
Traffic: | 14,500 (1996) |
Open: | April 20, 1897, reopened 1995 |
Closed: | 1991-1995 for renovations |
Toll: | none |
The Strawberry Mansion Bridge is a steel arch truss bridge across the Schuylkill River in Fairmount Park in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.[1] [2]
It was built in 1896–1897 by the Phoenix Iron Company in Phoenixville, Pennsylvania,[3] under private ownership by the Fairmount Park Transportation Company, which operated trolleys over the bridge,[2] with pedestrian and carriage lanes on the north side. Trolley service was discontinued in 1946.
The Philadelphia Historical Commission designated the bridge as a historic structure on September 7, 1978.
From 1991 to 1995, the bridge was closed to vehicular and pedestrian traffic while it was restored to its historical appearance. As of 2010, the bridge remains in use, carrying vehicular and pedestrian traffic.
The bridge was featured in season 9, episode 5 of the American sitcom It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia, titled "Mac Day."