Cisco Bridges

Cisco Bridges
CPR bridge (black) in foreground, CNR bridge (orange arch) in background (with CPR train on it). Photo facing upriver.
CNR Cisco Bridge
Carries Canadian National Railway
Crosses Fraser River
Locale Siska, BC
Design truss arch bridge
Total length 247 m
Height 67 m
Coordinates 50°09′05″N 121°34′52″W / 50.151505°N 121.581114°W / 50.151505; -121.581114Coordinates: 50°09′05″N 121°34′52″W / 50.151505°N 121.581114°W / 50.151505; -121.581114
CPR Cisco Bridge
Carries Canadian Pacific Railway
Crosses Fraser River
Locale Siska, BC
Design truss bridge
Total length 160 m
Coordinates 50°08′55″N 121°34′42″W / 50.148535°N 121.5784°W / 50.148535; -121.5784

The Cisco Bridges are a pair of railroad bridges at Siska (historically known as Cisco) near Lytton, British Columbia, Canada[1]. The Canadian Pacific Railway and Canadian National Railway both follow the route of the Fraser River, one on each side, and the routes exchange sides at this point. The easier CPR route was laid first; when the CNR arrived later they needed to follow the more difficult route.[2] The area is popular with railfans[3] due to the proximity of the two bridges (which allows both bridges to be taken in one photograph, sometimes with a CPR and CNR train on each bridge simultaneously[4]), and the easy access to the area (the Trans-Canada Highway (BC Hwy 1) is parallel to both bridges down the east bank of the river. Directional running in the Fraser Canyon means that both CPR and CNR trains may be seen on both bridges.

Contents

Canadian National Railway

The Canadian National bridge is a truss arch bridge, 247 metres (810 ft) long and 90 metres (300 ft) high. The north-west end of the bridge abuts into a near-vertical rock face. The south-east end of the bridge crosses the CPR tracks about 100 metres (330 ft) north of the CPR bridge.

Canadian Pacific Railway

The Canadian Pacific bridge is a 3-span, 160 metres (520 ft)-long truss bridge[5]. There are two short Pratt truss spans at each end of the longer Parker truss main span. The south end of the bridge (on the west bank of the river) enters directly into the Cantilever Bar Tunnel[6], in the side of the Cisco Bluff.

The original CPR Cisco Bridge, c.1900. Cantilever Bar Tunnel in background. Photo facing downriver.

The original span[7] was pre-fabricated in England and shipped to Canada in 1883.[8] When the current bridge was built at Cisco in 1910, the original span was moved to the Esquimalt and Nanaimo Railway on Vancouver Island to cross the Niagara Creek Canyon (48°28′57″N 123°33′27″W / 48.4825°N 123.5574°W / 48.4825; -123.5574), where it is still in use (now by the Southern Railway of Vancouver Island).

Wide view of area showing full length of CPR tunnel from left end of black bridge in centre to left edge of photo. Photo facing upriver.

References

External links


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем решить контрольную работу

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Cisco Unified Communications Manager — (CUCM), formerly Cisco Unified CallManager and Cisco CallManager (CCM), is a software based call processing system developed by Cisco Systems. CUCM tracks all active VoIP network components; these include phones, gateways, conference bridges,… …   Wikipedia

  • Cisco Discovery Protocol —    Abbreviated CDP. A proprietary Cisco protocol that runs on all hardware made by Cisco, including routers, switches, access servers, and bridges.    CDP is both protocol and mediaindependent. A router running CDP can advertise its existence to… …   Dictionary of networking

  • Siska, British Columbia — The Cisco Bridges, the main landmark at Siska; CNR in foreground, CPR in background Siska, also known historically as Cisco, is a locality in the Fraser Canyon of British Columbia …   Wikipedia

  • Spanning Tree Protocol — Internet protocol suite Application layer BGP DHCP DNS FTP HTTP …   Wikipedia

  • Spanning tree protocol — The Spanning Tree Protocol is an OSI layer 2 protocol that ensures a loop free topology for any bridged LAN. It is based on an algorithm invented by Radia Perlman while working for Digital Equipment Corporationcite… …   Wikipedia

  • Bridging (networking) — Bridging is a forwarding technique used in packet switched computer networks. Unlike routing, bridging makes no assumptions about where in a network a particular address is located. Instead, it depends on flooding and examination of source… …   Wikipedia

  • 802.1D — 7         7 6         6 5         …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • IEEE 802.1D — 7         7 6         6 5         …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Layer-2-Switch — Ein Switch (engl. Schalter; auch Weiche) ist eine Netzwerk Komponente zur Verbindung mehrerer Computer bzw. Netz Segmente in einem lokalen Netzwerk (LAN). Da Switches den Netzwerkverkehr analysieren und logische Entscheidungen treffen, werden sie …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Netzwerkbrücke — 7         7 6         6 5         …   Deutsch Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”