Supriya Ghosh (Editor)

Lowell Bridge

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Carries
  
Pioneer Street

Address
  
Lowell, OR 97452, USA

Total length
  
50 m

Crosses
  
Dexter Lake

Opened
  
1945

Location
  
Lowell

Lowell Bridge

Locale
  
Near Lowell, Oregon, U.S.

Other name(s)
  
Middle Fork Willamette River Covered Bridge

Preceded by
  
First Lowell Bridge (replaced in 1945)

Followed by
  
Pioneer Street (bypassed)

Hours
  
Closed now Monday8AM–5PMTuesday8AM–5PMWednesday8AM–5PMThursday8AM–5PMFriday8AM–5PMSaturdayClosedSundayClosed

Similar
  
Covered bridge, Unity Bridge, Parvin Bridge, Pengra Bridge, Currin Bridge

Lowell bridge demo


Lowell Bridge is a covered bridge in Lowell, Oregon, United States. The original bridge was built in 1907. The current bridge was built in 1945. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1979.

Contents

Technology using soap to replace lowell bridge


History

Before the Lowell Bridge was constructed, pioneer Amos Hyland settled on the Middle Fork Willamette River in 1874, and established the town of Lowell, which he named after his birthplace of Lowell, Maine. The founding of the town coincided with construction of a railroad through the settlement. At the site of the current bridge, Hyland operated a ferry across the river. The ferry operated until 1907, when a bridge was built by Nels Roney, who was also the builder of the Shelton-McMurphey-Johnson House in Eugene.

An accident occurred in 1945 when a truck caused major damage to the bridge. It was replaced by the current bridge, which is the widest in the state. In 1953, in preparation for the flooding expected to be caused by the Dexter Dam in two years, the entire bridge was raised 6 feet (1.8 m), and the floor replaced. Dexter Dam inundated the area, creating Dexter Reservoir, when it was completed in 1955. The engineers' water level calculations proved to be correct: the water clearance was about 2 feet (0.6 m).

After 1979

On November 29, 1979, the bridge was added to the National Register of Historic Places. A concrete bypass of the bridge was under construction at the time, when a dump truck with its bed up drove through, causing major damage to the bridge. Unlike the prior damage, the bridge was repaired with new roof braces and portal boards before the bypass was opened a few weeks later.

The Western Federal Lands Highway Division, Lane County, the Oregon Department of Transportation, and the United States Forest Service built an interpretive center in 2006 for $1.2 million. It includes several signs explaining the history of Lane County's covered bridges, and the area around Lowell and Lowell Bridge.

References

Lowell Bridge Wikipedia