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Rochester–Monaca Bridge

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Carries
  
2 lanes of PA 18

Longest span
  
780 feet (240 m)

Opened
  
1986

Location
  
Monaca

Crosses
  
Ohio River

Address
  
Rochester, PA 15074, USA

Clearance below
  
21 m

Body of water
  
Ohio River

Rochester–Monaca Bridge

Locale
  
Monaca, Pennsylvania, Rochester, Pennsylvania

Design
  
Steel continuous truss bridge

Bridge type
  
Continuous truss bridge, Suspension bridge

Similar
  
Ohio River, Beaver Bridge, Vanport Bridge, Ambridge–Aliquippa Bridge, Fallston Bridge

The Monaca–Rochester Bridge is a steel through continuous truss bridge which crosses the Ohio River between Monaca, Pennsylvania and Rochester, Pennsylvania. It opened in 1986 and is the third bridge to occupy the site. It replaced a 1930 steel truss cantilever bridge which itself replaced a suspension bridge built in 1896.

Naming tradition

The bridge is also called the Rochester–Monaca Bridge. From 1987 to 2009, the bridge was named each year in honor of the winner of the Rochester vs. Monaca high school football game. In 1988, the Rochester Manager Ed Piroli and Monaca Manager Tom Stoner made a bet signed with a handshake that gave the naming rights of the bridge to the winning team of that year. With Monaca High School's merger into Central Valley High School, the 2009 game was the final game to determine naming rights. By winning the 2009 game, the bridge will be known as the Rochester–Monaca Bridge through the end of the school year. After that, it will be called the Rochester–Monaca Bridge on the Rochester side, and the Monaca-Rochester Bridge on the Monaca side. Both towns' police departments respond to incidents on the bridge, with the incident location on the bridge deciding which town takes charge of incident.

References

Rochester–Monaca Bridge Wikipedia