- 10th Avenue Bridge
Infobox_Bridge
bridge_name=10th Avenue Bridge
caption=The 10th Avenue Bridge in Minneapolis
official_name=
crosses=Mississippi River
carries=Two lanes of automobile traffic
locale=Minneapolis, Minnesota
design=Concrete rib deck-arch bridge
mainspan=266 feet
length=2175 feet
width=68 feet
below=101 feet
open=1929
maint=Minnesota Department of Transportation
id=2796
map_cue=Bridges over the Mississippi in Minneapolis/St. Paul.
map_
map_text=10th Ave Bridge is in green, about center on this image, between Collapsed I-35 Bridge in shadow red and Washington Ave. Bridge
map_width=300px
coordinates= coord|44|58|44|N|93|14|38|W|region:US_type:landmarkThe 10th Avenue Bridge crosses the
Mississippi River near downtownMinneapolis, Minnesota and also in proximity to theUniversity of Minnesota . The bridge was formerly called the Cedar Avenue Bridge from days prior to the construction of the I-35W bridge when it connected to Cedar Ave. The bridge connects 10th Avenue Southeast, on the east side of the Mississippi River to 19th Avenue South, on the west side. The bridge is considered the crowning achievement of Minneapolis city engineerKristoffer Olsen Oustad , who was one of four prominent Norwegian-American men who designed major structures in the region. It was added to theNational Register of Historic Places in 1989, and also marks the downstream boundary of theSaint Anthony Falls Historic District. During the days immediately following the I-35W bridge collapse, the 10th Avenue Bridge was closed to traffic, then later reopened; it was one of the most used locations from which to view the wreckage and the recovery efforts.Construction on the bridge began in 1926, and it was completed in 1929. The total length is 2,174.9 feet (662.9 m), with two central spans each 265.5 feet (80.9 m) across. It has an
open spandrel arch design, and it is constructed ofreinforced concrete . Higher and longer than any preceding bridge in the region, it was originally 2,921 feet (890.3 m) in overall length, 698 feet (213 m) longer than the nearby Third Avenue Bridge. It stands 110 feet (33.5 m) above the water's surface. Cost of the bridge was US$891,000. A major restoration was undertaken in 1972–1976, and the approach spans were altered (they were not considered architecturally significant, even when the bridge was new). The south approach span was relocated to go straight to Washington Avenue.It was built to alleviate the traffic flows on the bridges serving downtown about a mile upstream. Roads in the vicinity were disrupted by the construction of Interstate 35W and a corresponding bridge (completed 1967; collapsed in 2007) one to two blocks upstream (the famous Seven Corners area of Minneapolis is at the south end). The downstream end of the lower Saint Anthony Falls lock and
dam extends under the bridge. The historicSoutheast Steam Plant is also nearby.The original Cedar Avenue Bridge was built in 1872, but not in the same location. It was further upstream, closer to the first Hennepin Avenue suspension bridge. That bridge was an iron Parker truss structure with a 17-foot roadway and sidewalks. After the new bridge was built, the old bridge remained in service until 1934, when it was closed to vehicle traffic and the sidewalks were removed. In 1942, the old bridge was demolished for scrap and its 400 tons of metal were used for the
World War II effort.ee also
*
List of crossings of the Upper Mississippi River
*I-35W Mississippi River bridge References
*(1996). [http://www.mnhs.org/places/nationalregister/bridges/nrhecab/nrheced.html Minnesota's Historic Bridges: Cedar Avenue Bridge.]
Minnesota Historical Society .
* cite book
last = Costello
first = Mary Charlotte
year = 2002
title = Climbing the Mississippi River Bridge by Bridge, Volume Two: Minnesota
publisher = Adventure Publications
location = Cambridge, MN
id = ISBN 0-9644518-2-4Crossings navbox
structure = Bridges
place =Mississippi River
bridge = 10th Avenue Bridge
bridge signs =
upstream =St. Anthony Falls (35W) Bridge
upstream signs =
downstream =Northern Pacific Bridge Number 9
downstream signs = Pedestrian
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