Samiksha Jaiswal (Editor)

Tacony–Palmyra Bridge

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Crosses
  
Delaware River

Opened
  
14 August 1929

Total length
  
1,115 m

Official name
  
Tacony-Palmyra Bridge

Construction started
  
1926

Location
  
Philadelphia

Tacony–Palmyra Bridge

Carries
  
3 lanes of PA 73 and Route 73, and 2 sidewalks

Locale
  
Philadelphia (Tacony), Pennsylvania and Palmyra, New Jersey

Maintained by
  
Burlington County Bridge Commission

ID number
  
3000001 (NJ), 677301999100150 (PA)

Address
  
1300 NJ-73, Palmyra, NJ 08065, USA

Similar
  
Burlington–Bristol Bridge, Betsy Ross Bridge, Benjamin Franklin Bridge, Walt Whitman Bridge, Calhoun Street Bridge

The Tacony–Palmyra Bridge is a combination steel arch, double-leaf bascule bridge across the Delaware River that connects New Jersey Route 73 in Palmyra, New Jersey with Pennsylvania Route 73 in the Tacony section of Philadelphia. The bridge, designed by Polish-born architect Ralph Modjeski, has a total length of 3,659 feet (1,115 m) and spans 2,324 feet (708 m). After one and a half years of construction, it opened in 1929, replacing ferry service that had operated between Tacony and Palmyra since 1922.

Owned and maintained by the Burlington County Bridge Commission of New Jersey, the bridge has a $4 cash toll and $3 E-ZPass toll for westbound (Pennsylvania-bound) traffic. Despite interruptions due to occasional openings for passing shipping traffic (the upper Delaware River is navigable as far north as Van Sciver Lake near Bristol, Pennsylvania), it serves as a lower-cost alternative to the more southerly, six-lane, high-span Betsy Ross Bridge, which charges $5 for the westbound crossing.

Built with four lanes, the bridge was modified in 1977 to have three wider lanes – two westbound towards Philadelphia and one eastbound towards New Jersey. A walkway provides access for pedestrian and bicycle traffic.

The bascule draw span is located immediately east of the main, arched span. On October 10, 2013, the bascule span jammed and became stuck in the open position when a roller under the maintenance walkway seized, closing the bridge for approximately eleven hours.

References

Tacony–Palmyra Bridge Wikipedia