Trisha Shetty (Editor)

Ohio Connecting Railroad Bridge

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Carries
  
2 rail lines

Design
  
Steel truss bridge

Clearance below
  
21 m

Location
  
Pittsburgh

Body of water
  
Ohio River

Crosses
  
Ohio River

Opened
  
1915

Longest span
  
155 m

Bridge type
  
Truss bridge

Ohio Connecting Railroad Bridge httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Locale
  
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania

Similar
  
Ohio River, CSX Susquehanna River Brid, McKees Rocks Bridge, Neville Island Bridge, PRR Port Perry Bridge

The Ohio Connecting Railroad Bridge is a steel bridge which crosses the Ohio River at Brunot's Island at the west end of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United States. It consists of two major through truss spans over the main and back channels of the river, of 508 feet (155 m) and 406 feet (124 m) respectively, with deck truss approaches.

Contents

History

The original Ohio Connecting Bridge was built in 1890 by the Ohio Connecting Railway. It was a single-track bridge. It was built as a freight bypass so the freight trains of the Pennsylvania Railroad could bypass the congested passenger station in downtown Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Traffic could move in either direction between the Pennsylvania Railroad main line in Pitcairn, Pennsylvania (part of the Pittsburgh Division at that location) and the Fort Wayne Line at the north end of the Ohio Connecting Bridge. Trains would traverse the Port Perry Branch, Monongahela Division, and Panhandle Division in order to reach the Pittsburgh Division or the Fort Wayne Line.

By 1915 the original bridge was not large enough to handle the increasing freight traffic, so a new bridge was built with two tracks. The new bridge was built around the old bridge while the old bridge was still in service. The new bridge also had a siding and car elevator in the center so coal could be delivered to the coal-fired power plant on the island.

This 1915 bridge is still in service.

The north end of the bridge has a wye so trains can be directed west or east. If a train is directed east it must pass through Island Avenue Yard to get to the mainline.

Trains at the south end of the bridge could be directed east onto the Monongahela Division or south/southwest onto the Panhandle Division, Scully Yard, or onto the Chartiers Branch.

In 1968 the Pennsylvania Railroad merged with the New York Central to form Penn Central. Penn Central became a part of Conrail in 1976. In 1999, CSX and Norfolk Southern Railway (NS) bought Conrail, with NS getting 58% and CSX getting 42%. The Ohio Connecting Bridge was acquired by NS.

The present

NS continues to use the bridge as part of the route trains with double-stack containers use. This practice was started by Conrail in 1995. Many coal trains coming out of the Monongahela Valley also use this bridge. Sometimes mixed freight and other types of trains use the bridge. No scheduled passenger trains use the bridge.

References

Ohio Connecting Railroad Bridge Wikipedia