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The Suspension Bridge
The first suspension bridge with a horizontal truss-braced deck is
credited to James Finley, who in 1801 built a 69 foot span across
Jacob's Creek in Pennsylvania. Suspension bridges become more
economical to build than other types of bridges for spans greater than
1500 feet. Suspension
bridges utilize cables that are attached to anchorages at either end, and
draped over towers, to hold up the deck over which the traffic
flows. One of the most difficult and dangerous aspects of building
a suspension bridge is the laying of caissons or cofferdams, used in
constructing the foundations. Cofferdams are built in place,
whereas caissons are generally constructed elsewhere and moved into
place. They are used to support the towers. John
Roebling, one of the principal bridge builders of the
late nineteenth and early twentieth century, became the premier builder
of wire suspension bridges in the United States. Renaissance
philosopher-scientist Faustus Verantius (1551-1617) described three
suspension bridge designs in his book Machinae Novae (c.
1615).
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The
George Washington Bridge was built between 1927 and 1931, connecting Fort
Lee, New Jersey to Manhattan. It has two decks for
vehicular traffic and a main span of 3500 feet; its total length, anchor
to anchor, is 4,760 feet. Its engineer, Othmar Ammann, originally
intended the towers to be granite. Because of cost considerations,
he agreed to have a steel skeleton covered in concrete; the concrete was
abandoned as well and the trademark steel frame construction was left as
it was. Ammann was quoted in Gay Talese's book The Bridge
(about the Verrazano-Narrows) to say of the GW: "It is as if you have
a beautiful daughter and you are her father." |
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images copyright (c) Steven M. Richman 2000-2008. All rights reserved. |