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Bayou Teche Bridge Extant Rolling lift (Scherzer) bascule: 1940 2016 LA 86 (Bridge Street) Bayou Teche: New Iberia: Iberia: LA-30: Calcasieu River West Fork Bridge Extant Vertical-lift bridge: 1968 2016 LA 378: Calcasieu River west fork Moss Bluff: Calcasieu
The Rigolets is spanned by two bridges. The western terminus of the U.S. Route 90 Rigolets Bridge is located immediately north of Fort Pike. It was damaged by Hurricane Katrina in August 2005, and required major repairs. [7] Farther south, CSX Transportation crosses the Rigolets on a 1,388-meter (4,555-ft) railroad bridge. [8]
vertical lift bridge Deweyville-Starks Swing Bridge: 1936-38 2011-06-08 Starks vicinity: Calcasieu: Part of Historic Bridges of Texas, 1866-1945 MPS. [2] Kansas City Southern Railroad Bridge, Cross Bayou: ca. 1890, 1926: 1995-03-23 Shreveport
This is intended to be a complete list of the properties and districts on the National Register of Historic Places in Lafourche Parish, Louisiana, United States. The locations of National Register properties and districts for which the latitude and longitude coordinates are included below, may be seen in a map.
In 1979, a new bridge running diagonally across Bayou Blue on the Bourg-Larose Highway eliminated a zigzag at that point, straightening the roadway. [24] [25] In Houma, the two high-level bridges crossing the Gulf Intracoastal Waterway were constructed in 1996, replacing two grade-level movable bridges at the same location. [26] [27] [28]
Louisiana Highway 87 (LA 87) is a state highway located in southern Louisiana. It runs 42.04 miles (67.66 km) in a northwest to southeast direction from LA 86 in New Iberia to the junction of two local roads north of Centerville. The route parallels Bayou Teche downstream from New Iberia through Iberia Parish and into neighboring St. Mary Parish.
The Sarto Bridge is a swing truss bridge built in 1916 over the Bayou Des Glaises at Big Bend in Avoyelles Parish, Louisiana. It is also known as the Sarto Old Iron Bridge. [2] It was the first bridge in Louisiana to be placed on the National Register of Historic Places, [3] which occurred in 1989. [1]
The Cote Blanche Bridge crosses Bayou Lafourche [1] at West 79th Street in the town of Cut Off, Louisiana. Built in 1956, this steel pontoon bridge has a total length of 191.9 feet (58.5 m) with its largest span at 84 feet (26 m). The bridge deck is 18 feet (5.5 m) wide. [2] [3]