Rahul Sharma (Editor)

Bridge Street Bridge (Newark)

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Crosses
  
Passaic River

Material
  
steel

Total length
  
113 m

Owner
  
Essex County, New Jersey

ID number
  
0700H03

Opened
  
1913

Location
  
Newark

Bridge Street Bridge (Newark)

Carries
  
CR 508 (Bridge Street & Harrison Avenue)

Locale
  
Newark and Harrison, New Jersey

Design
  
Through truss swing bridge

Address
  
Bridge St, Newark, NJ 07102, USA

Similar
  
Clay Street Bridge, Jackson Street Bridge, William A Stickel Memorial, Newark Drawbridge, Swing bridge

The Bridge Street Bridge is a swing bridge over the Passaic River connecting Newark and Harrison, New Jersey. It is the 10th bridge from the river's mouth at Newark Bay and is 5.7 miles (9.2 km) upstream from it. Carrying vehicular traffic, the roadway is designated County Route 508.

The span is a rim-bearing Pratt thru truss swing span supported on ashlar substructure with concrete caps originally built by the American Bridge Company. It opened in 1913 and underwent significant rehabilitation in 1981. It is listed on the New Jersey Register of Historic Places (ID#3093) The bridge was re-lamped in 2012. The bridge's electric motor was damaged by Hurricane Sandy in 2012, requiring replacement.

Like the other vehicular swing bridges in Newark, the Jackson Street Bridge and the Clay Street Bridge, it crosses over the tidal navigable portion of the river. and is required to open with 4-hour notice. The swing bridge of Newark are expected to open as much as 10 times a day during a massive clean-up of the Passaic starting in 2015 to allow barges to move contaminated sludge dredged from the river bottom raingi concerns about their releiabilty. As of 2016 studies were under to study its replacement.

History

The site of Bridge Street Bridge has been a river crossing since the colonial era. In 1790 the state legislature decided that "public good would be served by a 64 feet (20 m) wide road from Paulus Hook to the Newark Courthouse". By 1795 a bridge over the Hackensack 950 feet (290 m) long and another over the Passaic 492 feet (150 m) long were built creating an uninterrupted toll road connection. The road between them is known as the Newark Turnpike.

References

Bridge Street Bridge (Newark) Wikipedia