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Senator Robert D. Fleming Bridge

Coordinates: 40°29′28″N 79°56′17″W / 40.4912°N 79.9381°W / 40.4912; -79.9381
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Senator Robert D. Fleming Bridge
Coordinates40°29′28″N 79°56′17″W / 40.4912°N 79.9381°W / 40.4912; -79.9381
Carries4 lanes of PA 8 (62nd Street)
CrossesAllegheny River
LocalePittsburgh and Sharpsburg
Other name(s)62nd Street Bridge
ID number02-0008-0180-0048[1]
Characteristics
Designcantilever Warren Truss bridge
Longest span370 feet (110 m)
Clearance below51 feet (16 m)
History
Constructed byAmerican Bridge Company
OpenedJuly 1, 1962
Location
Map

The Senator Robert D. Fleming Bridge, commonly known as the 62nd Street Bridge, is a truss bridge that carries Pennsylvania Route 8 across the Allegheny River between the Pittsburgh neighborhoods of Morningside and Lawrenceville and Sharpsburg, Pennsylvania.

History

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The Allegheny was first crossed at this point by a wooden bridge, built in 1856. This was replaced by the Sharpsburg Bridge in 1901, which was itself replaced in 1962, as it was deemed too narrow for the traffic volume that it carried.

The current bridge was completed on July 1, 1962, and is named for Robert D. Fleming, a former Republican Pennsylvania state senator whose district included portions of Pittsburgh's northeastern suburbs. It was built alongside and just upstream from the old bridge and consists of sixteen individual spans, including a 1,054-foot-long (321 m) four-span truss channel unit, with a 400-foot-long (120 m) span over the river and a 494-foot-long (151 m) three-span girder section with a 227-foot-long (69 m) central span over the railroad.[2]

A 200-foot-long (61 m) section of the bridge buckled when the Crescent Supply Co. warehouse beneath it was destroyed by fire on May 28, 1981.[3] The bridge was reopened in January 1983.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Pennsylvania Department of Transportation (2007). "PA Highway Bridges". Retrieved 2 May 2010.
  2. ^ The American Bridge Company. "Robert D. Fleming (62nd Street) Bridge". Retrieved May 3, 2010.
  3. ^ "62nd Street Bridge Repairs Near Completion". The Pittsburgh Press. January 7, 1983. Retrieved February 18, 2010.
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