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Portland’s Bridges

A mostly nice day yesterday and I took my bicycle and new camera for a ride along both sides of the Willamette River through downtown Portland. I earlier posted some detailed pictures of the St. Johns bridge at river mile 5.8.

Yesterday I made a quick tour of nearly all the remaining bridges connecting the east and west sides of the city.

At river mile 11.1 is the Fremont Bridge. Opened for traffic in November, 1973, it’s currently the newest bridge crossing the Willamette. The main span was assembled on land and barged and then lifted in place with 32 hydraulic jacks. At 6,000 ton, it was the heaviest bridge lift ever at the time. The lower deck is 175 feet above the water.

Fremont Bridge

At river mile 11.7 is the Broadway Bridge. Opened for traffic in April 1913. The Broadway was the longest double-leaf bascule drawbridge in the world when it opened. It is the longest Rall Bascule drawbridge still in existence.

Broadway Bridge

At river mile 12.1 is the Steel Bridge. Opened for rail traffic in July 1912 and other traffic in August 1912. The Steel carries train traffic on it’s lower deck and automobile and light rail on it’s upper deck. It’s the only double-deck vertical lift bridge of it’s type in the world. The lower deck can be lifted independently of the upper deck.

Steel Bridge

At river mile 12.4 is the Burnside Bridge. Opened for traffic in May 1926, it as one double-leaf Stauss bascule movable main span.

Burnside Bridge

I love the details added by these old builders. This is one of two bridge operator towers. Note the curlicues at the bottom of the tower and the filigree below the windows.

Burnside Bridge Operator Tower

At river mile 12.8 is the Morrison Bridge. Opened in May 1958, it has one double-leaf Chicago-style bascule movable main span. Note the bridge operators towers resemble airport control towers. Oh so modern…

Morrison Bridge

At river mile 13.1 is the Hawthorne Bridge. Opened in December 1910, it is the oldest of the current bridges. It has a vertical lift movable span.

Hawthorne Bridge

At river mile 13.5 is the Marquam Bridge. Open in October 1966, it carries north and southbound Interstate 5 on it’s upper and lower decks. There have been many complaints about the Marquam for it’s lack of style and grace, but it was built for utility rather than beauty.

Marquam Bridge

At river mile 14.0 is the Ross Island Bridge. Opened in May 1926. The Ross Island Bridge is a 5-span steel cantilever deck truss with arch-shaped main span. This is generally the same type of bridge that collapsed in Minnesota recently.

Ross Island Bridge

A couple more bridges further south down the river I haven’t gotten to yet and I really want some more detailed pictures of the bridges I’ve recorded so far.

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  1. <img class="monsterid" src="http://www.gaiser.org/knitblog/wp-content/plugins/wp-monsterid/monsterid/d267b41aebea0f4.png" alt="Karen K. MonsterID Icon" height="65" width="65"/> Karen K.
    August 19th, 2007 at 13:22 | #1

    Interesting! Good pictures, thanks for posting.

  2. August 19th, 2007 at 20:32 | #2

    Thank you for the pictures. I recently moved away from Portland and your pics reminded me of the times I walked across those bridges. Good memories:)

  3. August 19th, 2007 at 22:24 | #3

    Your photos have captured the beauty that I find in Portland’s bridges. Thanks for posting them!

  4. <img class="monsterid" src="http://www.gaiser.org/knitblog/wp-content/plugins/wp-monsterid/monsterid/1a03aaf4bb97412.png" alt="Judy MonsterID Icon" height="65" width="65"/> Judy
    August 20th, 2007 at 07:25 | #4

    Great photos! I think I saw a couple of these when the History Channel did Underground Portland in their Cities of the Underworld awhile back. Didn’t know Portland had such a dark past. :) Judy

  5. <img class="monsterid" src="http://www.gaiser.org/knitblog/wp-content/plugins/wp-monsterid/monsterid/ea74b22ac49ff5c.png" alt="Barbara-Kay MonsterID Icon" height="65" width="65"/> Barbara-Kay
    August 21st, 2007 at 05:42 | #5

    :grin: I also enjoyed the tour. You might be interested to know that in Baton Rouge, LA, Huey Long built the rail/car bridge that carries Rt. 190 low enough (on purpose!) that Baton Rouge would then become the last deep-water seaport on the Mississippi River. No ocean-going ships could pass under it. The old rascal!

  6. August 21st, 2007 at 08:41 | #6

    I love the variety of you blog. You knit with us. You take us take us to celebrations. And, you invite us along for tours of your city and surrounding area! Thank you so much for sharing and for the wonderful pictures. It is almost as good as being there!

  7. August 21st, 2007 at 13:18 | #7

    This is wonderful! Thank you! I’ve been trying to learn the bridges as they are generally unmarked (or marked so obscurely that I can’t see it as I drive on them) and people use them to give directions. But you may have actually helped me learn them finally!

  8. <img class="monsterid" src="http://www.gaiser.org/knitblog/wp-content/plugins/wp-monsterid/monsterid/7ba3df49ae9a986.png" alt="BarbM MonsterID Icon" height="65" width="65"/> BarbM
    August 21st, 2007 at 19:13 | #8

    Great shots. this is the kind of stuff I used to shoot for PennDOT when I worked for them.Bridge Unit on one end of the hall and Mass Transit on the other. The kept me busy. Trains,planes,buses and bridges.Keep on shooting.

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Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 United States
This work by Jerry Gaiser is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 United States.