Fort Wayne Railroad Bridge

Coordinates: 40°26′53″N 79°59′46″W / 40.4480°N 79.9961°W / 40.4480; -79.9961
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Fort Wayne Railroad Bridge
The main span over the Allegheny River, as seen from the David L. Lawrence Convention Center, 2022
Coordinates40°26′53″N 79°59′46″W / 40.4480°N 79.9961°W / 40.4480; -79.9961
Carries2 tracks of NS / Amtrak Fort Wayne Line
Official nameBridge No. 1, Pittsburgh, Fort Wayne and Chicago Railway
Characteristics
Total length985 feet (300 m) 5 spans
Longest span319 feet (97 m)
Clearance belowdeck is 40.9 feet (12.5 m) above Emsworth Dam normal pool level (710 feet (220 m) above sea level)
History
Opened1901-1904
Location
Map

The Fort Wayne Railroad Bridge, listed as the Pennsylvania Railroad Bridge on the National Register of Historic Places, is a double-deck steel truss railroad bridge spanning the Allegheny River in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.

The upper deck carries the Fort Wayne Line with two tracks of Norfolk Southern and Amtrak traffic. The lower deck is unused. The bridge crosses 40 feet (12 m) above the Allegheny and its longest span is 319 feet (97 m).

History[edit]

The bridge was built between 1901 and 1904 by American Bridge Company on new piers immediately next to the 1868 bridge it replaced while the old bridge remained in use.[citation needed]

The 1868 bridge was a five-span wrought-iron lattice truss built for the Pittsburgh, Fort Wayne and Chicago Railway with two simple plate girder spans as approach roads at each end.

In 1918 the bridge and associated approaches were raised (as were other neighboring bridges) to increase navigable headroom.

The lower level was used by local freight trains switching in the Downtown area and the Strip District. Its tracks were removed in the 1980s as part of a major track and platform realignment through Pennsylvania Station.[1]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Kobus, Ken (1996). The Pennsy in the Steel City: 150 years of the Pennsylvania Railroad in Pittsburgh. Upper Darby, Pennsylvania: Pennsylvania Railroad Technical and Historical Society. pp. 19–22.

External links[edit]