Trisha Shetty (Editor)

Lincoln Highway Passaic River Bridge

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Crosses
  
Passaic River

ID number
  
0705151

Total length
  
611 m

Design
  
Vertical-lift bridge

Body of water
  
Passaic River

Locale
  
Newark and Kearny

Opened
  
1941

Location
  
Newark

Material
  
Steel

Lincoln Highway Passaic River Bridge httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Carries
  
US 1/9 Truck East Coast Greenway

Other name(s)
  
Route 1&9 Lincoln Highway Bridge Rte 1&9 Passaic River Bridge

Owner
  
New Jersey Department of Transportation

Similar
  
Lincoln Highway Hackens, Newark and New York Railr, Upper Bay Bridge, Belleville Turnpike Bridge, CRRNJ Newark Bay Bridge

The Lincoln Highway Passaic River Bridge is a vehicular moveable bridge crossing the Passaic River at a point 1.8 mi (2.9 km) from the river mouth at Newark Bay in northeastern New Jersey, United States. The vertical lift bridge, along the route of the Lincoln Highway, carries U.S. Route 1/9 Truck (at milepoint 0.67) and the East Coast Greenway between the Ironbound in Newark and Kearny Point in Kearny. Opened in 1941, it is owned by and operated by the New Jersey Department of Transportation (NJDOT) and required by the Code of Federal Regulations to open on 4-hour notice for maritime traffic.

Contents

Location

The Lincoln Highway Bridge crosses the Passaic in the vicinity of Kearny Point Reach following the route that was once Newark Plank Road. The east bank at Kearny Point is an industrial and distribution warehouse area. During the first half of the 20th century it was a site of yards of the Federal Shipbuilding and Drydock Company. At its western end there are connections to Raymond Boulevard, US Route 1/9, and the New Jersey Turnpike.

The bridge and its sister, the Lincoln Highway Hackensack River Bridge are important components in the transportation of goods in the Port of New York and New Jersey. Since the nearby Pulaski Skyway prohibits trucks they often use Route 1/9 Truck to serve traffic at Port Newark, Newark Airport, the Holland Tunnel and the numerous intermodal freight transport facilities in the New Jersey Meadowlands. The NJDOT is considering building a new bridge along the alignment of the now defunct PD Draw, the former Newark and New York Railroad bridge at mile point 1.2. Studies are being conducted as part of an extensive project conceived to facilitate freight transshipment through the port known as Portway. A new bridge could include a rail component. The dual bridge combination would allow for two one-way crossings of the Passaic.

History

Approval for the bridge was given by the War Department in 1937. Construction began in 1939 and it was opened in January 1941. It was designed by the firm of Ash, Howard, Needles, and Tamman in conjunction with Morris Goodkind of the New Jersey Highway Department to incorporate many innovative concepts of the era.

References

Lincoln Highway Passaic River Bridge Wikipedia