Lake Shore and Michigan Southern Railway, Bridge No. 6
Lake Shore and Michigan Southern Railway, Bridge No. 6 | |
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Bridge No. 6 in 1999. | |
Coordinates | 41°43′11″N 87°32′34″W / 41.71972°N 87.54278°WCoordinates: 41°43′11″N 87°32′34″W / 41.71972°N 87.54278°W |
Carries | Two tracks per span, four total |
Crosses | Calumet River |
Locale | Chicago, Illinois |
Maintained by | Norfolk Southern Railway |
Characteristics | |
Design | Vertical-lift bridge |
Material | Steel |
Width | 31 feet (9.4 m) each span[1] |
Longest span | 209.75 feet (63.9 m)[1] |
Number of spans | Two parallel |
History | |
Designer | Waddell & Harrington |
Constructed by | Dravo Contracting Company |
Construction begin | 1912 |
Construction end | 1915 |
Lake Shore and Michigan Southern Railway, Bridge No. 6 is a steel vertical-lift bridge consisting of two parallel spans, carrying two tracks each, across the Calumet River in Chicago, Illinois, United States. The structure is currently owned by Norfolk Southern Railway but disused and kept in a raised position.[2]
The current structure replaces an earlier swing bridge on the same site, built for the Lake Shore and Michigan Southern Railway. When the United States Army Corps of Engineers began calling for its replacement in 1909, both single- and double-leaf bascule bridge options were considered, as well as vertical-lift options. Construction began on foundations for a single, four-track vertical-lift span before changing to the two parallel two-track spans that were completed in 1915.[1]
The bridge was designated as a Chicago landmark on December 12, 2007.[3]
See also
- List of bridges documented by the Historic American Engineering Record in Illinois
- List of Chicago Landmarks
References
- 1 2 3 Historic American Engineering Record (HAER) No. IL-156, "Pittsburgh, Fort Wayne and Chicago Railway, Calumet River Bridge"
- ↑ Historic American Engineering Record (HAER) No. IL-161, "Lake Shore and Michigan Southern Railway, Bridge No. 6"
- ↑ Chicago Department of Housing and Economic Development, Historic Preservation Division. "Lake Shore & Michigan Southern Railway Bridges". Retrieved 2013-01-14.