Supriya Ghosh (Editor)

Minneapolis BNSF Rail Bridge

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Crosses
  
Mississippi River

Maintained by
  
BNSF Railway

Opened
  
1893

Width
  
10 m

Body of water
  
Mississippi River

Locale
  
Minneapolis, Minnesota

ID number
  
A1.3

Total length
  
168 m

Location
  
Minneapolis

Minneapolis BNSF Rail Bridge httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Carries
  
Two tracks of the BNSF Railway's Wayzata Subdivision

Design
  
One truss span, three plate girder spans, and three concrete girder spans

Bridge type
  
Truss bridge, Plate girder bridge, Girder bridge

Similar
  
Plate girder bridge, Girder bridge, Burlington Northern Railroad, Hennepin Avenue Bridge, Fort Madison Toll Bridge

Minneapolis BNSF Rail Bridge is a combination plate girder bridge and truss bridge that spans the main channel of the Mississippi River between downtown Minneapolis, Minnesota and Nicollet Island in Minneapolis. It is located adjacent to the current Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis.

Contents

History

It was built in 1893 by the Great Northern Railway and remodeled in 1926. It replaced a bridge built at the same location in 1867 for the St. Paul and Pacific Railroad. This was the first Mississippi river railroad crossing in Minneapolis.

Current construction

In 1963, two of the girder spans and a pier were removed, and a Petit truss span was added in its place. This was done to allow upstream navigation past St. Anthony Falls for barges. The Petit truss design is unusual for the Mississippi River and is one of three on the island (Boom Island and Nicollet Island Inn bridges are Petit truss spans, too).

The south side of the bridge has an unusual protrusion coming out of it. There was once a curved bridge coming off the end going to the Minneapolis Union Depot (later the Minneapolis Great Northern Depot). When passenger service was discontinued from downtown Minneapolis and West River Parkway was built, the curve and the trackage going to the depot was removed.

Usage

The St. Paul and Pacific Railroad eventually became the St. Paul, Minneapolis, and Manitoba Railway, then Great Northern Railway, Burlington Northern and eventually the BNSF Railway. It currently serves the branches to Willmar and Monticello, as well as providing access to interchange for the Twin Cities and Western Railway.

With the opening of Northstar Commuter Rail from its terminus at Target Field, the bridge once again carries passenger traffic.

References

Minneapolis BNSF Rail Bridge Wikipedia