Ashfield Bridge: Difference between revisions
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
(Created page with "Highway bridge connecting Ashfield Central and Downtown") |
No edit summary |
||
(3 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown) | |||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
Highway bridge connecting [[Ashfield Central]] and [[Downtown]] | {{DISPLAYTITLE:Greenfield Bay Bridge}} | ||
{{Infobox|above=Ashfield Bridge|caption=Aerial view of the Bridge|data1=Complete|data2=Bridge, Infrastructure|data3=172, -861, [[Ashfield Central]], [[Downtown]]|data4=--|data5=Unknown|Image=[[File:Main span.png|256px]]|label1=Status|label2=Type|label3=Location|label4=Introduced|label5=Built by}} | |||
The Ashfield Highway bridge is a 1,280-foot-long (390 m) suspension bridge, crossing the ''river'', connecting [[Ashfield Central]] and [[Downtown]]. The bridge is part of [[I-105|Highway 105]], also known as the Bayside Freeway. The bridge hosts 6 lanes of highway traffic, championed as one of the longest suspension bridges in California. | |||
== History == | |||
=== Ashfield Bridge I === | |||
The original bridge crossing the waterway was composed of an early 1900s Gothic style suspension bridge (see Gallery below), serving Greenfield for over 50 years. The Greenfield Transportation Authority then commissioned Whitney & Arupthy Associates to design a new modern bridge to replace the now-aging bridge. | |||
=== Greenfield Bay Bridge === | |||
{{DEFAULTSORT:Greenfield_Bay_Bridge}} |
Latest revision as of 22:16, 3 January 2023
Ashfield Bridge | |
---|---|
Status | Complete |
Type | Bridge, Infrastructure |
Location | 172, -861, Ashfield Central, Downtown |
Introduced | -- |
Built by | Unknown |
The Ashfield Highway bridge is a 1,280-foot-long (390 m) suspension bridge, crossing the river, connecting Ashfield Central and Downtown. The bridge is part of Highway 105, also known as the Bayside Freeway. The bridge hosts 6 lanes of highway traffic, championed as one of the longest suspension bridges in California.
History
Ashfield Bridge I
The original bridge crossing the waterway was composed of an early 1900s Gothic style suspension bridge (see Gallery below), serving Greenfield for over 50 years. The Greenfield Transportation Authority then commissioned Whitney & Arupthy Associates to design a new modern bridge to replace the now-aging bridge.