- Kingston-Rhinecliff Bridge
Infobox Bridge
bridge_name= Kingston-Rhinecliff Bridge
caption=Bridge seen from Eastern shore of the Hudson River
official_name=George Clinton Memorial Bridge|locale=Kingston, New York , Rhinecliff, New York
carries=Two lanes of NY 199
crosses=Hudson River
open=February 2 ,1957
maint=New York State Bridge Authority
design=Continuous Under-deck Truss Bridge
toll=US$1.00
mainspan= 2 x 800 ft (244 m)
length=7,793 ft (2375 m)
width=2 lanes with shoulders
below=250 ft (76 m) above river
lat=41.978762
long=-73.94593The Kingston-Rhinecliff Bridge is a Continuous under-deck truss bridge that carries NY 199 across theHudson River inNew York State north of the City of Kingston and the hamlet of Rhinecliff. It was opened to traffic onFebruary 2 ,1957 as a two-lane (one in each direction) bridge, although it was not actually complete. Formal opening wasMay 11 ,1957 . The original cost was $17.5 million.The bridge, owned by the
New York State Bridge Authority (NYSBA), carries two lanes of traffic and approximately 17,000 vehicles per day. It was designed byDavid B. Steinman and the builders wereHarris Structural Steel and Merritt-Chapman & Scott Corporation, and is the second northernmost, and second newest, of the 5 bridges that NYSBA owns and operates. The bridge has twomain span s, since there is an east and west channel in the Hudson River at this point.Planning for a bridge in this general area to replace the ferry service, which was viewed as sporadic and unreliable, (there were no Hudson bridges for 1/2 hour or more drive time in either direction) began in the early 1940s. The site for the bridge, as originally proposed was between Kingston Point and downtown Rhinebeck, and the design was initially a
Suspension bridge almost identical in appearance to theMid-Hudson Bridge . When the site was relocated about 3 miles northward, there was no stable bedrock for anchorages, so the design was changed to a continuous under-deck truss. Construction commenced in 1954. When theNewburgh-Beacon Bridge was proposed, provisions were inserted in the enabling legislation that construction on that bridge could not commence until the Kingston-Rhinecliff was completed.Like all NYSBA bridges currently, the Kingston-Rhinecliff is a
toll bridge , with the toll set at 1.00 USD for automobiles and other 2 axle vehicles, as of 2008.External links
* [http://www.nycroads.com/crossings/kingston-rhinecliff/ NYCroads: Historic overview]
* [http://www.nysba.state.ny.us/bridgepages/KRB/KRBpage/krb_stats.htm Statistics] from the NYSBA site
* [http://www.nysba.state.ny.us/bridgepages/KRB/KRBpage/history/krb_history.htm Bridge history] from the NYSBA site
* [http://www.nysba.state.ny.us/Index%20Page/tolls.htm Toll schedule] from the NYSBA site
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* [http://www.chashsells.com/Services/TransEng/projects/Route199.htm Chas H. Sells] rehabilitation project informationCrossings navbox
structure = Crossings
place =Hudson River
bridge = Kingston-Rhinecliff Bridge
bridge signs =
upstream =Rip Van Winkle Bridge
upstream signs =
downstream =Poughkeepsie Bridge
downstream signs =
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