Vance Creek Bridge

From HighestBridges.com
Revision as of 22:48, 15 November 2009 by Sakowski (talk | contribs) (Created page with '<div style="font-size: 25px; text-align: center;"> Vance Creek Bridge<br /> Shelton, Washington, United States<br /> 347 feet high / 106 meters high<br /> 422 foot span / 129 met…')
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to navigationJump to search

Vance Creek Bridge
Shelton, Washington, United States
347 feet high / 106 meters high
422 foot span / 129 meter span
1929

1VanceCreekBridge.jpg


The second highest railway arch bridge ever built in the United States, the Vance Creek arch bridge soars 347 feet (106 mtrs) above a thick forest valley in Washington State’s Olympic peninsula. Originally constructed in 1929 by the Simpson Logging Company, the bridge was eventually abandoned and has neither tracks nor a roadway on top of it. Located several miles north on the same rail line and still in use as a road bridge since 1950 is the High Steel bridge over the South Fork of the Skokomish river and the highest arch bridge ever built for a U.S. rail line at 365 feet (111 mtrs). Both bridges were built by the American Bridge Company.



Vance Creek Bridge Elevation


2VanceCreekBridge.jpg

Image by Eric Sakowski / HighestBridges.com


3VanceCreekBridge.jpg

Image by Eric Sakowski / HighestBridges.com


4VanceCreekBridge.jpg

Image by Eric Sakowski / HighestBridges.com


5VanceCreekBridge.jpg

Image by Eric Sakowski / HighestBridges.com


6VanceCreekBridge.jpg

Image by Eric Sakowski / HighestBridges.com


7VanceCreekBridge.jpg

Image by Eric Sakowski / HighestBridges.com


8VanceCreekBridge.jpg

Image by Eric Sakowski / HighestBridges.com


9KerrySkarbakkaShot.jpg

Kerry Skarbakka image