Panhandle Bridge

Panhandle Bridge
Coordinates 40°25′59.12″N 79°59′53.06″W / 40.4330889°N 79.9980722°W / 40.4330889; -79.9980722Coordinates: 40°25′59.12″N 79°59′53.06″W / 40.4330889°N 79.9980722°W / 40.4330889; -79.9980722
Carries 2 tracks of the PAT "T Line"
Crosses Monongahela River
Locale Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
Official name Monongahela River Bridge
Characteristics
Design Truss bridge
History
Opened 1903

The Panhandle Bridge (officially the Monongahela River Bridge) carries two rail lines of the Port Authority "T" line across the Monongahela River in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. The name comes from Pennsylvania Railroad subsidiary Pittsburgh, Cincinnati, Chicago and St. Louis Railroad, also known as the Panhandle Route, which operated over the bridge.

The basic structure was built in 1903, and was the third railroad bridge on the site since 1863. It was raised in 1912-14 as part of a grade separation project. The bridge's function was to carry Panhandle Route passenger, mail and express trains from Pennsylvania Station in Pittsburgh, with a tunnel in between the station and the bridge. Pennsy Panhandle freight trains utilized the Ohio Connecting Bridge slightly downstream on the Ohio River, or went the long way around the West Virginia Panhandle via Conway, Pennsylvania.

Rail traffic over the Panhandle Bridge declined as passenger trains were discontinued, and Amtrak became the only regular user of the bridge from 1971 to 1979, when the New York-St. Louis-Kansas City National Limited was discontinued on October 1 of that year. As PRR successor Conrail had no use for the bridge and the restrictive downtown tunnel, it was sold to the Port Authority, who rebuilt the bridge beginning in 1982 as part of the downtown light rail subway project, which removed trolleys from downtown streets and the Smithfield Street Bridge. PAT (as the Port Authority system was known at the time) light rail cars began using the bridge on July 7, 1985.

See also

A one-car T Light Rail train crosses the bridge.
Bridge supports from the river.
Light rail crossing the bridge.

External links

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This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Monday, October 05, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.