Third Avenue Bridge (Minneapolis)

Third Avenue Bridge

Third Avenue Bridge spanning the Mississippi, viewed from north-west
Coordinates 44°59′00″N 93°15′32″W / 44.98333°N 93.25889°W / 44.98333; -93.25889Coordinates: 44°59′00″N 93°15′32″W / 44.98333°N 93.25889°W / 44.98333; -93.25889
Carries Four lanes of MN 65
Crosses Mississippi River
Locale Minneapolis, Minnesota
Maintained by Minnesota Department of Transportation
ID number 2440
Characteristics
Design Open-spandrel concrete arch bridge
Total length 2223 feet
Width 54 feet
Longest span 211 feet
Clearance below 42 feet
History
Opened 1918

Bridges over the Mississippi in Minneapolis–St. Paul. 3rd Ave is near middle of the image between Hennepin Ave. Bridge and Stone Arch Bridge.

The Third Avenue Bridge is a landmark structure of the city of Minneapolis, Minnesota, originally known as the St. Anthony Falls Bridge. It carries road traffic across the Mississippi River and right over the upper fringes of Saint Anthony Falls. The multi-arched bridge meets with Third Avenue in downtown Minneapolis at its south end, but curves as it crosses the river, and connects with Central Avenue on its north end. The shallow "S" curve in the bridge was built to avoid fractures in the limestone bedrock that supports the bridge piers. The road is also designated Minnesota State Highway 65. Construction began in 1914, and it opened four years later in 1918.[1] The bridge, which uses arches of an open spandrel design, has been modified since that time, and underwent a major overhaul in 1979-1980. The 2,223-foot (667.6 m) crossing was designed by city engineer Frederick W. Cappelen, who also created plans for other similar bridges in Minneapolis such as the Franklin Avenue Bridge. It cost US$862,254.00 at the time.[1]

See also

Notes

  1. 1 2 Zschomler, Kristen for Mead & Hunt (2006). "Minnesota Historic Property Record: Third Avenue Bridge" (PDF). Minnesota Department of Transportation (dot.state.mn.us). Retrieved August 22, 2011.

References

Media related to Third Avenue Bridge (Minneapolis) at Wikimedia Commons

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