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Squirrel Creek Bridge: 1916–1917 2010-9-3 Shawnee vicinity: Pottawatomie: State Highway 78 Bridge at the Red River: 1937, 1938 1996-12-20 Ravenna: Bryan: K-truss through bridge State Highway 79 Bridge at the Red River: 1939 1996-12-20
Survey No. Name (as assigned by HAER) Status Type [2] Built Documented Carries Crosses Location County Coordinates OK-2: Bridge over Bird Creek Abandoned
also: Buildings and structures: by country: United States: by state: Oklahoma: Bridges Bridges in the U.S. state of Oklahoma . Wikimedia Commons has media related to Bridges in Oklahoma .
An Interstate 35 bridge over the Oklahoma River is pictured April 1. A third bridge, funding for which was included in a 2017 bond issue, will cross the Oklahoma River between Western and Exchange ...
The Twin Bridges Area at Grand Lake State Park, previously Twin Bridges State Park, is a park on the north side of the Grand Lake o' the Cherokees in northeastern Oklahoma. It was named for the two bridges that carry U.S. Highway 60 over arms of the lake that connect to the Neosho River and the Spring River. Twin Bridges State Park is known for ...
The bridge at night, 2014. On May 15, 2002, the United States Department of Transportation approved a plan for the Oklahoma City Crosstown realignment. Included in the plan was the requirement that the city build a pedestrian bridge to cross Interstate 40. [2] [3] In 2008, Oklahoma City mayor Mick Cornett announced a design competition for the ...
The I-40 bridge disaster was a bridge collapse that occurred southeast of Webbers Falls, Oklahoma, United States at 7:45 a.m. on May 26, 2002. Freight barges being transported on the Arkansas River collided with a pier supporting the Interstate 40 road bridge crossing the river. The resulting failure of the supports caused a section of the ...
The river is a major source of tourism in the area. In 1999, it was estimated to have brought in approximately 500,000 tourists and $9 million to the Oklahoma section of the river. The upper section and its tributaries, Flint Creek and the Baron Fork, became a designated Scenic River under the Oklahoma Scenic Rivers Act in 1977.