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Wooden-trussed bridge Sylvan Road Bridge: 1915 1978-06-23 Glencoe: Cook: Frank Lloyd Wright's only bridge Tartar's Ferry Bridge: ca. 1880: 1980-10-29 Smithfield: Fulton: Parker Third Street Bridge (Delavan, Illinois) 1907 1999-05-20 Delavan
Des Plaines River Bridge Extant Rolling lift (Scherzer) bascule: 1932 1988 US 30 (West Jefferson Street) Des Plaines River: Joliet: Will: IL-59: Santa Fe Railroad, Illinois and Michigan Canal Bridge Extant Warren truss: 1935 1988 BNSF Railway
The Manhattan Bridge is a suspension bridge that crosses the East River in New York City, ... [124] and the bridge's subway tracks opened in June 1915. [125]
Vertical-lift bridge: 1915 2009 NY 271 (Main Street) New York State Barge Canal: Middleport: Niagara: NY-508: New York State Barge Canal, Hartland Road Lift Bridge Extant Vertical-lift bridge: 1913 2009
5 lanes of roadway (2 Manhattan-bound, 3 Brooklyn-bound) Oldest suspension bridge in NYC. Also oldest suspension/cable-stayed hybrid bridge. Manhattan Bridge: 1909: 6,854 2,089: 7 lanes of roadway and trains: Double-decker bridge with 5 westbound lanes and 2 eastbound lanes. 3 of the westbound lanes and the subway are below the other 4 lanes.
This allows riders on the Manhattan-bound B and Q trains (and D trains during late nights when they stop at DeKalb Avenue) right before the bridge to look to their right and experience the illusion that the paintings are moving. [12] By the mid-1980s, despite Brand's efforts to maintain the artwork, it fell into a state of disrepair.
The BRT opened its first Brooklyn subway under Fourth Avenue on June 22, 1915, running over the Manhattan Bridge to a junction with the aforementioned Nassau Street Line at Canal Street. [17] The BRT opened the first segment of its Manhattan main line subway, the Broadway Line, as far as 14th Street–Union Square on September 4, 1917. [18]
This original 1913 path of the Lincoln Highway continued east from Philadelphia, crossing the Delaware River to Camden, New Jersey on the Market Street Ferry. By 1915, Camden was dropped from the route, allowing the highway to cross the Delaware on a bridge at Trenton (initially the Calhoun Street Bridge, later the Bridge Street Bridge).