- Rainbow Bridge (Niagara Falls)
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Rainbow Bridge
Rainbow Bridge as seen from Canada - August, 2007Carries 4 lanes of vehicular traffic (2 each way), pedestrian traffic Crosses Niagara River Locale Niagara Falls, Ontario and Niagara Falls, New York Maintained by Niagara Falls Bridge Commission Design Arch bridge Longest span 950 feet (290 m) Opened November 1, 1941 Toll 3.25 USD/CAD per auto ($2.75 with ExpressPass/Prepaid NEXUS), 50 cents USD/CAD per pedestrian/bicycle. Tolls are collected entering Canada. No tolls are collected entering the United States.[1] The Rainbow Bridge at Niagara Falls is an international steel arch bridge across the Niagara River gorge, and is a world-famous tourist site. It connects the cities of Niagara Falls, New York, United States (to the east), and Niagara Falls, Ontario, Canada (west).
Contents
Construction
The Rainbow Bridge was built near the site of the earlier Honeymoon Bridge, which had collapsed on January 27, 1938, due to an ice jam in the river. A joint Canadian and American commission had already been considering a new bridge to replace it, and the collapse added urgency to the project.
A design by architect Richard (Su Min) Lee was chosen (and later used again for the Lewiston-Queenston Bridge, approximately 10 kilometres (6 mi) downriver). King George VI and Queen Elizabeth, during their visit to Niagara Falls as part of the 1939 royal tour of Canada, dedicated the site of the Rainbow Bridge; a monument was erected to commemorate the occasion. Construction began in May 1940. The bridge was officially opened on November 1, 1941.
The New York State Department of Transportation designates the bridge as NY 955A, an unsigned reference route, while the Ontario Ministry of Transportation designates the bridge as part of Highway 420, even though it is separated from the rest of the route by a regional road. On the American side, a number of state and national routes end at a set of intersections in front of the bridge. New York routes 104 and 384, as well as the northern section of the Robert Moses State Parkway, all terminate at the final intersection before the bridge, and none of the designations passes onto the bridge itself. U.S. Route 62 terminates two blocks north at route 104, which then continues to the bridge.
The complex on the Canadian side of the Rainbow Bridge features the Rainbow Tower, which houses a large carillon that sounds several times daily.
The bridge permits no commercial trucks; the nearest border crossing for these is the Lewiston-Queenston Bridge.[2]
The toll to cross the bridge for each pedestrian and bicycle is 50¢ USD or CAD, and $3.25 USD or CAD for automobiles. Tolls are collected entering Canada. No tolls are collected entering the United States.[1]
Cityscape
See also
External links
- Niagara Falls Bridge Commission
- Google Maps view of Rainbow Bridge
- Images from the Historic Niagara Digital Collections
- Rainbow Bridge at Structurae
References
Bridges of the Niagara River Upstream
North Grand Island Bridge
Rainbow Bridge Downstream
Michigan Central Railway BridgeCoordinates: 43°5′24.84″N 79°4′3.88″W / 43.0902333°N 79.0677444°W
Categories:- Bridges completed in 1941
- Bridges in Niagara Falls, Ontario
- Bridges in Niagara Falls, New York
- Canada–United States border crossings
- Deck arch bridges
- International bridges
- Bridges over the Niagara River
- Road bridges in Ontario
- Toll bridges in Canada
- Road bridges in New York
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