Supriya Ghosh (Editor)

Reversing Falls Railway Bridge

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Crosses
  
Saint John River

Total length
  
372 m

Location
  
Saint John

Bridge type
  
Truss bridge

Design
  
steel truss

Opened
  
1922

Province
  
New Brunswick

Body of water
  
Saint John River

Reversing Falls Railway Bridge httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommons44

Locale
  
Saint John, New Brunswick

Official name
  
Reversing Falls Railway Bridge

Similar
  
Reversing Falls Bridge, Saint John Harbour Bridge, Reversing Falls, Hartland Bridge, Florenceville Bridge

The Reversing Falls Railway Bridge is the name given to two different steel truss bridges crossing the Saint John River at the same location in Saint John, New Brunswick, Canada.

The original bridge was constructed in 1885 immediately upstream of a highway crossing known as the Reversing Falls Bridge. Measuring 372 metres (1,220 ft) in length, the railway bridge carried a single-track main line.

It was constructed by the Saint John Bridge and Railroad Extension Company which was a municipal-owned corporation established to connect two separated sections of the former European and North American Railway project. The eastern section of the E&NAR was merged into the Intercolonial Railway following Confederation while the western section was acquired by the New Brunswick Railway (NBR). The Saint John Bridge and Railroad Extension Company was acquired by the NBR following the construction of the bridge. The NBR was purchased by the Canadian Pacific Railway in 1890.

A replacement structure keeping much of the same design was opened in 1922 to accommodate heavier loads; the original being demolished in 1921.

In 1976 NB Power constructed the Lorneville Pipeline from Irving Oil's Canaport supertanker oil terminal at Red Head, 4 km (2.5 mi) southeast of the city to the Coleson Cove Generating Station, 16 km (9.9 mi) southwest of the city; it crosses the Saint John River using this bridge.

The City of Saint John also uses the bridge to carry water supply pipes.

The railway bridge is currently owned and operated by the New Brunswick Southern Railway, following CPR's sale of its Canadian Atlantic Railway subsidiary in 1995.

References

Reversing Falls Railway Bridge Wikipedia