Misplaced Pages

Pennsylvania Avenue Bridge

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
This article is about the bridge over Rock Creek. For historical and current bridges over the Anacostia River, see Pennsylvania Avenue Bridge (1890) and John Philip Sousa Bridge. Bridge in Washington, D.C.
Pennsylvania Avenue Bridge
Coordinates38°54′17″N 77°03′22″W / 38.90472°N 77.05611°W / 38.90472; -77.05611
CarriesPennsylvania Avenue
CrossesRock Creek
LocaleWashington, D.C.
Other name(s)Meigs Bridge
OwnerDistrict of Columbia Department of Transportation
Characteristics
DesignDeck arch
Material1860: Cast iron
1916: Concrete
Total length1860: 200 feet (61 m);
1916: 276 feet (84 m)
Width1916: 73 feet (22 m)
Height1916: 40 feet (12 m)
History
DesignerMontgomery C. Meigs (1860);
District of Columbia Government (1916)
Fabrication byPhoenix Iron Co., Philadelphia (1860)
Construction start1858; 1913
Construction end1860; 1916
Opened1860
Location

The Pennsylvania Avenue Bridge conveys Pennsylvania Avenue across Rock Creek and the adjoining Rock Creek and Potomac Parkway, between the neighborhoods of Georgetown and Foggy Bottom in Northwest Washington, D.C. Pennsylvania Avenue terminates at M Street immediately west of the bridge.

Original configuration

The original appearance of the bridge in the 1860s

The original bridge at this site was constructed of large cast iron pipes by the Army Corps of Engineers from 1858 to 1860. Montgomery C. Meigs designed the bridge and supervised its construction as part of the original construction of the Washington Aqueduct. It was officially named the Meigs Bridge after it was completed, although name that never caught on and it was often called other names such as the Tubular Bridge.

At its construction, it was the only bridge made entirely of cast iron of substantial size in the United States. It was initially intended to be solely an aqueduct bridge carrying water mains connected to the Georgetown Reservoir, but the onset of the Civil War necessitated making it a vehicular crossing as well. The level of traffic was such that the wooden deck had to be replaced every three years.

The bridge used an innovative design in which the 48-inch water pipes themselves formed the load-bearing arches of the bridge supporting the roadway. A water pressure engine in the west abutment supplied water to a reservoir at the current site of the Georgetown branch of the D. C. Public Library to feed the significant part of the City of Georgetown that was too high to be directly fed by the main Washington Aqueduct. A horse-drawn streetcar line crossed the bridge from 1863 to 1872, when it was rerouted over the nearby M Street Bridge.

Current configuration

In 1913, the D.C. Board of Commissioners opted to build an expanded arch bridge around the existing bridge rather than construct a completely new steel-girder bridge for cost reasons. The United States Commission of Fine Arts, the agency tasked with reviewing architectural projects in the capital, opposed the plan on aesthetic grounds, saying that the arch design would clash with the existing Q Street Bridge upstream, but their recommendations were ignored.

The expanded bridge was built of reinforced concrete with a smooth granite facing. The abutments and water mains of the original bridge are encased inside the expanded bridge, which still transports water to this day, although they no longer support the bridge's load. The new bridge was significantly wider than the original; increasing from 17 feet to 73 feet.

By 2015, the bridge was considered structurally deficient, with a 15-month rehabilitation planned for summer.

See also

References

  1. ^ Historic American Engineering Record (HAER) No. DC-21, "Pennsylvania Avenue Bridge"
  2. ^ DeFerrari, John (6 August 2013). "On Pennsylvania Ave, Georgetown's other aqueduct bridge". Streets of Washington. Retrieved 24 April 2015.
  3. Holt, Brady (11 February 2015). "Agency Tweaks Pennsylvania Avenue Bridge Rehabilitation Plan". The Georgetown Dish. Retrieved 24 April 2015.

External links

Crossings of the Rock Creek Valley
Upstream
M Street Bridge
Pennsylvania Avenue Bridge
Downstream
L Street Bridge
Georgetown, Washington, D.C.
History
Historic sites
Houses of worship
Streets and bridges
Education
Parks and
cemeteries
Establishments
Categories: