Harman Patil (Editor)

Grand Junction Railroad Bridge

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Crosses
  
Charles River

Opened
  
1927

Location
  
Boston

Design
  
Plate girder bridge

Body of water
  
Charles River

Material
  
Steel

Grand Junction Railroad Bridge

Carries
  
Grand Junction Railroad

Locale
  
Boston, Massachusetts to Cambridge, Massachusetts

Carry
  
Grand Junction Railroad and Depot Company

Bridge type
  
Truss bridge, Plate girder bridge

Similar
  
Boston University Bridge, River Street Bridge, Harvard Bridge, Leonard P Zakim Bunker Hi, Bowker Overpass

The Grand Junction Railroad Bridge is a steel plate girder bridge carrying the Grand Junction Railroad over the Charles River, connecting Boston to Cambridge, Massachusetts. In September 2009, the Commonwealth of Massachusetts finalized an agreement to purchase several CSX rail lines in eastern Massachusetts, including the Grand Junction tracks from the Beacon Park Yard in Allston, through Cambridge. The deal was closed on June 17, 2010.

On November 21, 2012, the Grand Junction Railroad Bridge was closed to all rail traffic due to its poor condition. This was a change from a restriction put in place days earlier, on November 16, which barred freight trains from crossing, as well as restricting MBTA and Amtrak equipment moves to 5 MPH. While emergency repairs were under way, trains moving between the north and south sides of Boston had to be routed via Pan Am Railways trackage between Ayer, Massachusetts and Worcester, Massachusetts (a 100+ mile detour). The bridge reopened in early January 2013, but was closed again in March for major structural repairs, reopening again in June.

References

Grand Junction Railroad Bridge Wikipedia