Suvarna Garge (Editor)

Point No Point Bridge

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Crosses
  
Passaic River

Clearance below
  
6.4 m

Location
  
Newark

Body of water
  
Passaic River

Design
  
Swing bridge

Clearance below
  
6.4 m

Bridge type
  
Swing bridge

Owner
  
Conrail

Point-No-Point Bridge bridgehuntercomphotos2574257459Mjpg

Carries
  
Passaic and Harsimus Line

Locale
  
Newark and Kearny New Jersey

Similar
  
Upper Bay Bridge, Swing bridge, WR Draw, Newark Drawbridge, Clay Street Bridge

Point-No-Point Bridge is a railroad bridge crossing the Passaic River between Newark and Kearny, New Jersey in the New Jersey Meadowlands.The swing bridge is the fourth from the river's mouth at Newark Bay and is 2.6 miles (4.2 km) upstream from it.A camelback through truss bridge, it is owned by Conrail as part of its North Jersey Shared Assets and carries the Passaic and Harsimus Line used by CSX Transportation and Norfolk Southern. River Subdivision (CSX Transportation) accesses the line via Marion Junction.

A crossing of the Passaic at Point No Point was originally built by the Pennsylvania Railroad (PRR) in the early 1890s to bypass its mainline and thus shorten the distance to its railyard at Harsimus Cove. At the time the railroad crossed the Passaic at the Centre Street Bridge (no longer in existence) near its Newark station, at the site of today's New Jersey Performing Arts Center. The new Pennsylvania Cut-off diverged from the line (now today's Northeast Corridor) at Waverly Yard, crossed the Newark Ironbound and the Passaic to the Kearny Meadows and then crossed the Hackensack River on the Harsimus Branch Lift Bridge. It rejoined the main line at the Bergen Hill Cut, but diverged again using the Harsimus Stem Embankment to reach its freight yards on the Hudson River waterfront north of its passenger terminal at Exchange Place. The PRR also used the Lehigh Valley Railroad Bridge to reach its car float operations at Greenville Yard on the Upper New York Bay.

The Point-No-Point Bridge's creosote-covered piers caught fire in 2000.

The lower 17 miles (27 km) of the 90-mile (140 km) long Passaic River below the Dundee Dam is tidally influenced and navigable Commercial maritime traffic upstream of the Point-No-Point Bridge is constricted by the width between its piers when the moveable span is open. Rules regulating the drawbridge operations determined by the US Coast Guard require a 4-hour notice for it to be swung open.

References

Point-No-Point Bridge Wikipedia