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词条 U.S. 40 and 59 Bridges
释义

  1. Original bridge

  2. Second bridge

  3. Current bridges

  4. Image gallery

  5. References

{{Use American English|date=July 2016}}{{Use mdy dates|date=July 2016}}{{Infobox bridge
| bridge_name = U.S. 40 and U.S. 59 Bridges
| image = U.S. 40 and 59 bridges from above.jpg
| caption = The bridges as viewed from City Hall
| design = Five-span Howe truss (original bridge)
Concrete-deck arch (second bridge)
Twin multi-beam girder bridges (current bridges)
| crosses = Kansas River
| carries = {{Jct|state=KS|US|40|US|59}}, Vermont Street, Massachusetts Street
| open = 1864 (original bridge)
1917 (second bridge)
1978 (current southbound bridge)
1980 (current northbound bridge)
| locale = Lawrence, Kansas
| maint = KDOT
| coordinates = {{Coord|38.9762|-95.2357|type:landmark_region:US-KS|display=inline,title}}
}}

The U.S. 40 and 59 Bridges are twin multi-beam girder bridges over the Kansas River at Lawrence, Kansas.

The west bridge carries two lanes of southbound traffic, connecting to Vermont Street, while the east bridge carries two lanes of northbound traffic from Massachusetts Street. Both bridges converge on the north end to become North 2nd Street.[1] The east bridge is also the third bridge to be built at this location.

Original bridge

The first bridge was a 690-foot five-span Howe truss bridge built in 1864 by the Lawrence Bridge Company at a cost of $47,000. It was the first bridge across the Kansas River west of Kansas City. It was operated as a toll bridge until 1879, when the Kansas Supreme Court revoked the company's charter and seized the bridge on behalf of the state.[2]

The first bridge was washed out by floods in 1876 and 1903 and rebuilt. By 1913, the bridge was determined to be unsafe, and was subsequently replaced with the second bridge.[2]

Second bridge

The second bridge, a 1,026 foot concrete arch bridge, was built by Douglas County and opened in January 1917.[2][3] The bridge deck originally had a brick surface with a set of streetcar tracks down the center. The brick deck was later paved over.[4]

By 1972, the bridge had begun to deteriorate due to years of road salt, and required patching of the south span across the Santa Fe Railway track. In addition, a water main had been placed on the west side of the bridge at rail height. The bridge was carrying 17,000 vehicles per day.[3]

By 1973, Lawrence and Douglas County had agreed to hold a bond election for replacement of the Kansas River bridge. Initially proposed as a single four lane bridge at a cost of $3 million,[5] plans were changed to a pair of two lane bridges,[6] with the estimated costs increased to $5 million.[7] Voters approved the bond issue to replace the Kansas River bridge in November 1974.[8]

By January 1975, the spandrel beams on the deck had deteriorated to the point where an engineering consultant suggested that they may fail and cause a section of the bridge deck to drop.[8] The consultant recommended that an eight-ton weight limit be imposed on the bridge, which was approved by the Lawrence City Commission over the opposition of truckers.[9]

Current bridges

Work began on the new Vermont Street bridge in April 1976. The winning contractor had bid $4.5 million, a figure that was considered "surprisingly low."[1] Due to delays, the Vermont Street bridge was not completed and opened to traffic until April 4, 1978, at which time the old Massachusetts Street bridge was closed, and two-way traffic was temporally carried on the new bridge.[10]

The old bridge was demolished manually, with some of the bridge material used as temporary fill as part of construction of the new bridge.[4] Additional delays occurred on the new Massachusetts Street bridge; it was completed by January 1980, roughly a year and a half behind schedule. The bridge was not opened until March to allow the deck additional time to cure and not be exposed to winter salt treatments that could deteriorate the deck.[1][11]

Image gallery

{{Gallery
| File:U.S. 40 and 59 bridges from upstream.jpeg | From the south bank, upstream of the bridges
| File:U.S. 40 and 59 bridges from grade.jpeg | The pedestrian walkway on the east bridge
| File:Bowersock Dam from NE.jpg | Bowersock Dam with the bridges in the background
| File:U.S. 40 and 59 bridges from below.jpeg | From the south bank, between the bridges
| File:U.S. 40 and 59 bridges from downstream.jpg | From the south bank, downstream of the bridges and dam
| File:U.S. 40 and 59 eastern-bridge plaque.jpg | Plaque that commemorates the eastern bridge built in 1977
| File:U.S. 40 and 59 bridge-approaches plaque.jpg | Plaque that commemorates the bridge approaches built in 1977 and 1978
}}

References

1. ^{{cite news | last = Shoup | first = Shirley | title = Long-Delayed Span Opens Thursday | newspaper = Lawrence Journal-World | date = March 11, 1980 }}
2. ^{{cite news | last = Rowe | first = Elfriede | title = Crossing the Kaw in Bygone Age | newspaper = Lawrence Journal-World | date = April 11, 1968 }}
3. ^{{cite news | last = McIntosh | first = Toby | title = Faithful Bridge Gets Little Attention | newspaper = Lawrence Journal-World | date = April 7, 1972 }}
4. ^{{cite news | title = Old Bricks and Rails Unearthed | newspaper = Lawrence Journal-World | date = April 6, 1978 }}
5. ^{{cite news | title = Two Bridges Over Kaw River Instead of Expected One? | newspaper = Lawrence Journal-World | date = November 2, 1973 }}
6. ^{{cite news | title = Divided Bridge Proposal Gets Backing | newspaper = Lawrence Journal-World | date = July 4, 1974 }}
7. ^{{cite news | title = $3 Million Cost Estimate for Bridge May Be Low | newspaper = Lawrence Journal-World | date = November 16, 1973 }}
8. ^{{cite news | title = Consultant Explains Kaw Bridge Problems | newspaper = Lawrence Journal-World | date = January 27, 1975 }}
9. ^{{cite news | last = Pryor | first = Tim | title = City Moves to Set Bridge Load Limit | newspaper = Lawrence Journal-World | date = February 26, 1975 }}
10. ^{{cite news | last = Chartrand | first = David | title = New Bridge Opens with a Rush | newspaper = Lawrence Journal-World | date = April 4, 1978 }}
11. ^{{cite news | last = Shoup | first = Shirley | title = Salt's the Rub in Setting Date for Opening Bridge | newspaper = Lawrence Journal-World | date = January 22, 1980 }}
{{Crossings navbox
| structure = Crossings
| place = Kansas River
| bridge = U.S. 40 and 59 Bridges
| bridge signs =
| upstream = Kansas Turnpike Bridges
| upstream signs =
| downstream = Eudora Kaw River Bridge
}}

11 : Bridges completed in 1978|Bridges completed in 1980|Bridges on the United States Numbered Highways|Bridges over the Kansas River|Former toll bridges in Kansas|Road bridges in Kansas|U.S. Route 40|U.S. Route 59|Concrete bridges in the United States|Girder bridges in the United States|Buildings and structures in Douglas County, Kansas

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