Samiksha Jaiswal (Editor)

Sutliff Bridge

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Nearest city
  
Architectural style
  
Other

Construction started
  
1897

Total length
  
251 m

Body of water
  
Cedar River

Built
  
1897

Address
  
Lisbon, IA 52253, USA

Opened
  
1897

Bridge type
  
Truss bridge

Added to NRHP
  
15 May 1998

Sutliff Bridge

Location
  
Sutliff Road over Cedar River

Architect
  
G.W. Wynn; Jones & Laughlin Company

MPS
  
Highway Bridges of Iowa MPS

Similar
  
Lost Island Water Park, Adventureland, Riverview Park, Dodge Park Playland, Blank Park Zoo

Sutliff bridge


The Sutliff Bridge is a bridge over the Cedar River at Sutliff, a Johnson County community near Lisbon, Iowa, United States. A Parker truss bridge, it was built in 1897 and 1898 at a cost of approximately $12,000. J.R. Sheely was the engineer for the original Sutliff Bridge. After a modern replacement was built over the Cedar in 1983, the bridge was slated for destruction, but it was ultimately saved, and on May 15, 1998, it was added to the National Register of Historic Places. Although the bridge remained a celebrated location for locals and for visitors from across Iowa, including a 5k foot race beloved as the “worst road race in America", it succumbed to massive floods in the second week of June 2008: while the river normally flowed many feet below the bottom of the bridge, the floods topped the bridge's deck, and one of the bridge's spans was washed away on June 13 as the surrounding countryside was inundated with vast amounts of water. It is estimated that restoring the bridge will cost $1.7 million. Most of this money would come from the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), with the rest coming from donations and local governments; both FEMA and the Johnson County Board of Supervisors have agreed in principle to repair the bridge. The bridge reconstruction was supervised by VJ Engineering of Coralville, Iowa and construction was completed by Iowa Bridge and Culvert of Washington, Iowa. In October 2012 a ribbon cutting ceremony was held opening the bridge to public use for the first time in four years.

Contents

Ode to the sutliff bridge


References

Sutliff Bridge Wikipedia