List of vertical-lift bridges

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This is a list of vertical-lift bridges.

Examples[]

Australia[]

The Bridgewater Bridge is one of the last remaining operational vertical-lift bridges in Australia

Belgium[]

  • NL – road – zeekanaal Brussel-Schelde – opened 1955
  • NL – road – zeekanaal Brussel-Schelde – opened 1972
  • NL – road – zeekanaal Brussel-Schelde – opened 1968
  • NL – road – zeekanaal Brussel-Willebroek – opened 1968
  • NL – road – zeekanaal Brussel-Schelde – opened 1968
  • NL – road – zeekanaal Brussel-Willebroek – opened 1986
  • NL – road – zeekanaal Brussel-Schelde – opened 1952

Brazil[]

  • - road - Porto Alegre, Rio Grande do Sul - opened 1958

Canada[]

  • Bridges 5 (Glendale Avenue Bridge), 11 (Allanburg Bridge) and 21 (Clarence Street Bridge) on the Welland Canal, all built during the late 1920s as part of the Fourth Canal expansion project (1913–1932). In addition, there are also Bridges 13 (Main Street Bridge), 17 (Dain City Railway Bridge) and 18 (Forks Road Bridge) on the Welland Recreational Waterway (a former channel of the Welland Canal). However, these bridges have not been operational since 1973. Bridges 13 and 18 have had their counterweights removed while the machinery for Bridge 17 has been dismantled. In addition, Bridge 18 no longer possesses its towers; they were removed for ease of maintenance.
  • Burlington Canal Lift Bridge, over the Burlington Canal, Burlington, Ontario. Information is available from [1] Built 1962.
  • Pretoria Bridge over the Rideau Canal in Ottawa, Ontario
  • over the Red River in Selkirk, Manitoba
  • Victoria Bridge over the Saint Lawrence River connecting Saint-Lambert and Montreal, Quebec.
  • Second Narrows Bridge Vancouver, BC over Burrard Inlet (rail bridge).
  • Okanagan Lake Bridge in Kelowna, BC across Okanagan Lake – replaced in 2008.
  • Shippagan, NB over .
  • Sir Ambrose Shea Bridge, Placentia, NL. Built 1961.

China[]

France[]

The Pont Jacques Chaban-Delmas's approx. 110-metre (360 ft) lift span is likely the longest in Europe,[1] but that of the Pont Gustave-Flaubert is very nearly as long.
  • Pont Gustave-Flaubert – crossing the Seine at Rouen, this lift bridge is the highest vertical-lift bridge in Europe,[citation needed] allowing ships up to 55 m tall to pass under it. It is 670 m long, with a span of 116 metres[3]. A striking design feature, the two road sections are mounted outside the central towers. The bridge was designed by and and opened to road traffic on 25 September 2008. It is named after the author Gustave Flaubert who was born in Rouen.[4]
  • Pont de Recouvrance – over the river Penfeld in Brest – road & tramway[5]
  • FR – over the Ourcq Canal; the last surviving vertical-lift bridge in Paris
  • The Pont Jacques Chaban-Delmas, spanning the River Garonne in Bordeaux, was opened in March 2013. The central lift span is 117m long and can be lifted vertically up to 53m to let tall ships pass underneath. The bridge is 575m long with the central lift span weighing around 2,600 tonnes. Its width varies from 32 to 45m and it will be used by cars, trams, cyclists and pedestrians. It can handle 43,000 vehicles a day and will reduce traffic congestion in Bordeaux.[6] Structurae gives a length of 110 m for the lift span,[7] making it probably the longest vertical-lift span in Europe.[1]

Germany[]

Kattwyk Bridges, in Hamburg, Germany, left bridge with its lift span raised
  •  [de] in Hamburg, from 1934, demolished in 2018
  • Karnin Lift Bridge, Mecklenburg-Vorpommern
  •  [de], a pair of vertical-lift bridges in Hamburg, have a lift span 100 m long, one of the longest in Europe[1] It's opened in a regular schedule every two hours.

Italy[]

Ponte Due Giugno in Fiumicino, Italy
  • ES – road – Fiumicino, Rome– rebuilt in 1945

Indonesia[]

  • Ampera Bridge – an automobile lift bridge located in Palembang that cross the Musi River. This bridge is still used by road vehicles but since 1970 never lift its road deck again. Eventually its counterweights removed in 1990.[8]
The Botlek bridge in Rotterdam has two lifting spans of 87×50 m (95×55 yd), each with a surface area approaching a football field.[9]

Japan[]

  • Chikugo River Lift Bridge – connecting Ōkawa, Fukuoka and Saga, Saga. Constructed as a railway bridge in 1935, it is 507 m long, with a central span 24 m long that weighs 48 t and rises 23 m. The railway closed in 1987, but the bridge reopened to pedestrians in 1996 and was designated an important cultural property in 2003.[10]

The Netherlands[]

  • Rotterdam - 'De Hef' (The Lift), designed by Pieter Joosting, opened October 31, 1927[11][circular reference]
  • Gouwe – three identical lift bridges crossing the Gouwe river at Alphen aan den Rijn, Boskoop and Waddinxveen, built in 1930.
  • NL – in Rotterdam

Russia[]

Romania/Bulgaria[]

  • Danube Bridge, connecting both countries over Danube, between Giurgiu and Russe. Opened on 20 June 1954, the bridge is 2,223.52 m (7,295.0 ft) long and has a central lift-bridge (85 m) to allow the free-passing oversized boats passage.

Sweden[]

Ukraine[]

  • Bridge over the mouth of Dniester in Zatoka, built in 1953-1955.
  • The  [uk], over the Dnieper River in Kremenchuk, built in 1949

United Kingdom[]

United States[]

Aerial Lift Bridge in Duluth, Minnesota
Tower Bridge in Sacramento, California
Steel Bridge in Portland, Oregon
  • Adam Street Lift Bridge – A two-lane vehicle and pedestrian bridge spanning the Erie Canal in Lockport, New York. Built in 1917, it has a span of 130 ft (40 m). It was closed in 2011 and left in the raised position.[13]
  • Adams Basin Lift Bridge, also called the Washington Street Lift Bridge – A two-lane vehicle and pedestrian bridge spanning the Erie Canal near Spencerport, New York. Built in 1912, it has a span of 145 ft (44 m).[13]
  • Aerial Lift Bridge – An automobile bridge in Duluth, Minnesota which began life as an aerial transfer or ferry bridge.
  • Arthur Kill Vertical Lift Bridge – Connecting Elizabeth, New Jersey, and Staten Island, New York; with a lift with a 559-foot (170 m) span: the longest lift span in the world.[14][15]
  • ASB Bridge – A two-deck bridge over the Missouri River in Kansas City, Missouri. From 1911–87, handled both trains and cars, on separate decks, and still carries railroad traffic.
  • Bridge 710 – A single-track railroad bridge over the Calumet River in Chicago that served U.S. Steel's South Works. Formerly owned by EJ&E and now owned by Canadian National since their purchase of EJ&E.
  • Broadway Bridge – A bridge spanning the Harlem River and carrying both road traffic and trains of the New York City Subway's no. 1 line.
  • Burlington-Bristol Bridge – A two-lane bridge over the Delaware River, joining Bristol, Pennsylvania with Burlington, New Jersey near Philadelphia
  • The BNSF Railroad Bridge across the Willamette River, in Portland, Oregon. The 516-foot (157 m) lift span replaced a swing span in 1989 and, with 200 ft (61 m) of clearance underneath when raised, it is one of the highest vertical-lift bridges in the world.[16]
  • Canal Street railroad bridge – Chicago, IL 1914
  • Cape Cod Canal Railroad Bridge – A single-track railroad bridge over the Cape Cod Canal in Bourne, Massachusetts.
Two Erie Canal lift bridges in Lockport, New York, the nearest one shown raised for canal traffic (and closed to road traffic). The pedestrian stairs allow foot traffic to cross the raised span. Initially these bridges normally remained open for canal traffic and closed on demand for the sparse road traffic of the early 20th century. In 2011, the Adam Street Lift Bridge (in the background) was closed and left in the raised position. This image was taken in July 2010.
The Interstate Bridge, on Interstate 5 in Oregon–Washington, is one of only very few opening bridges on the national Interstate Highway System.
The Main Street Bridge in downtown Jacksonville, Florida.
The vertical-lift section of the Fourteenth Street Bridge at the east entrance to the Portland Canal in Louisville, Kentucky.

References[]

  1. ^ Jump up to: a b c "Vertical Lift Bridges: Most Important Structures in this Category". Structurae. Retrieved May 11, 2013.
  2. ^ "Gustave Flaubert Bridge". Structurae. Retrieved May 11, 2013.
  3. ^ Structurae gives a length of 100 m[2]
  4. ^ "6th bridge at Rouen: Pont Gustave Flaubert". Retrieved 2009-06-06.
  5. ^ Today's Railways Europe #1214, p15
  6. ^ "Bordeaux opens new lift bridge". The Connexion. March 18, 2013. Retrieved May 26, 2013.
  7. ^ "Jacques Chaban-Delmas Bridge". Structurae. Retrieved May 11, 2013.
  8. ^ "33 Tahun Sudah Jembatan Ampera Tak Bisa Naik Turun Lagi". Kompas (in Indonesian). April 19, 2003. Archived from the original on April 20, 2003. Retrieved September 15, 2007.
  9. ^ "De nieuwe Botlekbrug: Hefbrug van wereldformaat" [The new Botlek bridge: a lift-bridge of worldly size] (in Dutch). A-Lanes A15. 2012. Retrieved 29 Sep 2014.
  10. ^ Nihon Keizai Shimbun Evening edition 8 December 2008 p.1
  11. ^ nl:De Hef
  12. ^ "Bridge".
  13. ^ Jump up to: a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p National Park Service, National Register of Historic Places - New York State Barge Canal, Retrieved Sep. 13, 2017.
  14. ^ "Center of New Bridge Floated Across Arthur Kill on 4 Barges". New York Times. June 1, 1959. Retrieved 2010-09-16. The center of the world's longest vertical lift bridge was floated into place yesterday across the Arthur Kill between Elizabethport, N. J., and Arlington, S. I. ... Section of new BO bridge is moved into position in Arthur Kill behind old ... Kill on 4 Barges. The center of the world's longest vertical lift bridge ...
  15. ^ "The Arthur Kill Bridge.; Arguments For And Against The Proposed Plans" (PDF). The New York Times. 1888-03-22.
  16. ^ Jump up to: a b Wood Wortman, Sharon; Wortman, Ed (2006). The Portland Bridge Book (3rd ed.). Urban Adventure Press. pp. 119–123. ISBN 0-9787365-1-6.
  17. ^ "The Fairport Lift Bridge". Frank E. Sadowski Jr. Retrieved 2013-07-24.
  18. ^ "The Joe Page Bridge". Meeting of the Great Rivers Scenic Byway. Retrieved 2011-03-09.
  19. ^ "Naheola Bridge". Encyclopedia of Alabama. Retrieved 2021-07-22.
  20. ^ "Alabama bridge is one of only a few like it worldwide". al. 2021-07-21. Retrieved 2021-07-22.
  21. ^ "Willamette River (Steel) Bridge" (DOC). Portland Bridges. Oregon Department of Transportation. 1999. Retrieved 2007-08-25.
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