Puneet Varma (Editor)

Opaekaa Road Bridge

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Location
  
Kapaʻa, Hawaii

Architect
  
Joseph H. Moragne

Area
  
809.4 m²

Added to NRHP
  
28 March 1983

Built
  
1890, 1895, 1919

NRHP Reference #
  
83000253

Bridge type
  
Truss bridge

Opaekaa Road Bridge

Similar
  
Sleeping Giant, Kukaniloko Birth Site, Honokōhau Settlement and Kalo, Wailua River State Park, Opana Radar Site

The ʻOpaekaʻa Road Bridge is a steel truss bridge listed on the National Register of Historic Places located along ʻOpaekaʻa Road in the Wailua Homesteads neighborhood of Kapaʻa, on the island of Kauaʻi, in the state of Hawaii, United States. The one-lane bridge spans ʻOpaekaʻa Stream. With steel beams forged in 1890 by the Alexander Findlay & Company in Motherwell, Scotland, this is touted as possibly the only British-built bridge located in the United States.

History

The steel supports for this bridge were originally forged in 1890 and utilized as part of the Wailua River Bridge. Constructed as a three span, steel truss bridge, its construction was delayed through 1894 due to the overthrow of the Hawaiian Kingdom and the establishment of the Republic of Hawaii. When this span was replaced in 1919, the steel was reused in the construction of the present-day bridge over ʻOpaekaʻa Stream. Its relocation was carried out by then County Engineer Joseph Moragne.

Today, the largest span has a length of 33.1 feet (10.1 m), a total length of 74.2 feet (22.6 m) and a deck width of 12.5 feet (3.8 m). Having an average daily traffic of 382 vehicles as of 1986, the bridge is maintained by the Kauaʻi County Division of Roads. With a sufficiency rating of only 14.7 percent and substandard safety railing, this span is listed as structurally deficient and past the point of rehabilitation, necessitating the need for a replacement span for the crossing.

As a result of its age and exposure, many of its steel beams are rusted through, with much of its concrete deck cracked in multiple locations. Due to its deteriorating state as of 2007, its rated load is 5 tons. Currently, the span is downgraded to a weight limit of 3 tons, and is listed to be replaced as part of the Hawaii Department of Transportation's current statewide transportation improvement program.

References

Opaekaa Road Bridge Wikipedia