Navajo Bridge

Navajo Bridge

View to east with 1929 bridge at left, 1995 bridge at right
A portion of the Echo Cliffs is in the background.
Carries US 89A
Crosses Colorado River at Marble Canyon
Locale Lee's Ferry
Official name Navajo Steel Arch Highway Bridge
Characteristics
Design spandrel arch bridge with 90 feet (27 m) rise (both)
Material steel
Total length 834 feet (254 m) 1st
909 feet (277 m) 2nd
Width 18 feet (5.5 m) 1st
44 feet (13 m) 2nd
Longest span 616 feet (188 m) 1st[1]
726 feet (221 m) 2nd
Number of spans 1
Piers in water 0
Clearance below 467 feet (142.3 m) 1st
470 feet (143.3 m) 2nd
History
Construction begin 1927 (1st)
1994 (2nd)[2]
Construction end 1929 (1st)
1995 (2nd)[2]
Opened

1929 and 1995

Navajo Steel Arch Highway Bridge
Nearest city Page, Arizona
Coordinates 36°49′2″N 111°37′53″W / 36.81722°N 111.63139°W / 36.81722; -111.63139Coordinates: 36°49′2″N 111°37′53″W / 36.81722°N 111.63139°W / 36.81722; -111.63139
Built 1927
Architect Arizona Highway Dept.; Et al.
Architectural style Other
MPS Vehicular Bridges in Arizona MPS
NRHP Reference # 81000134[3]
Added to NRHP August 13, 1981

Navajo Bridge crosses the Colorado River's Marble Canyon near Lee's Ferry in the US state of Arizona carrying U.S. Route 89A (US 89A). Spanning Marble Canyon, the bridge carries northbound travelers to southern Utah and to the Arizona Strip, the otherwise inaccessible portion of Arizona north of the Colorado River, which includes the North Rim of Grand Canyon National Park.

Prior to the construction of the first Navajo Bridge, the only river crossing from Arizona to Utah was at nearby Lee's Ferry, where the canyon walls are low and getting vehicles onto the water is relatively convenient. The ferry offered only unreliable service, however, as adverse weather and flooding regularly prevented its operation.

History

Aerial view of the Navajo bridge. Newer bridge in the foreground and Vermilion Cliffs are behind the camera

Construction of the original Navajo Bridge began in 1927, and the bridge opened to traffic in 1929. It was paid for by the nascent Arizona State Highway Commission (now the Arizona Department of Transportation) in cooperation with the United States Department of the Interior's Bureau of Indian Affairs, as the eastern landing is on the Navajo Nation. The steel spandrel bridge design was constructed by the Kansas City Structural Steel Company. During construction, worker Lane McDaniel died after falling 470 feet (140 m) to the Colorado River below. Supervisors had rejected the idea of rigging safety netting, believing that it would catch on fire from falling hot rivets.[4]

The bridge is 834 feet (254 m) in length, with a maximum height of 467 feet (142 m) from the canyon floor. Its roadway offers an 18-foot (5.5 m) surface width with a load capacity of 22.5 tons (although the posted legal weight limit was 40 tons). During the design phase, a wider roadway was considered, but ultimately rejected, as it would have required a costly third arch to be added to the design, and the vehicles of the time did not necessitate the wider road.

In 1990, however, it was decided that the traffic flow was too great for the original bridge, and that a new solution was needed. The sharp corners in the roadway on each side of the bridge's approach had become a safety hazard due to low visibility, and the deficiency in the original design's width and load capacity specifications were becoming problematic. The bridge had also become part of U.S. Route 89A.

A view of the Marble Canyon and the Colorado River from Navajo Bridge.

Deciding on a solution was difficult, due to the many local interests. Issues included preservation of sacred Navajo land, endangered plant species in Marble Canyon, and the possibility of construction pollution entering the river. The original proposal called for merely widening and fortifying the bridge, but this was ultimately rejected since this could not possibly bring it up to current federal highway standards. Replacement was then the only option, and it was eventually decided to entirely discontinue automobile use of the original bridge. A new bridge would be built immediately next to the original and have a considerably similar visual appearance, but would conform to modern highway codes.

The new steel arch bridge was commissioned by the Arizona Department of Transportation and the Federal Highway Administration, and was completed in September 1995, at a cost of approximately $15 million.

The original Navajo Bridge is still open to pedestrian and equestrian use, and an interpretive center has been constructed nearby to showcase the historical nature of the bridge and early crossing of the Colorado River. Bungee jumpers are frequently seen using the span. The original bridge has been designated as a Historic Civil Engineering Landmark. The bridge was placed on the National Register of Historic Places on August 13, 1981.[3]

Bridge statistics

[5] [6]

Original bridge

Dedicated: June 14–15, 1929, after two years of construction
Total length: 834 feet (254 m)
Steel arch length: 616 feet (188 m)
Arch rise: 90 feet (27 m)
Height above river: 467 feet (142 m)
Width of the roadway: 18 feet (5.5 m)
Amount of steel: 2,400,000 pounds (1,100,000 kg)

Amount of concrete: 500 cubic yards (380 m3)
Amount of steel reinforcement: 82,000 pounds (37,000 kg)

Construction cost: $390,000

New bridge

The main pin of the new bridge was set October 14, 1994, after seven months of construction.
Total length: 909 feet (277 m)
Steel arch length: 726 feet (221 m)
Arch rise: 90 feet (27 m)
Height above river: 470 feet (140 m)
Width of the roadway: 44 feet (13 m)
Amount of steel: 3,900,000 pounds (1,800,000 kg)

Amount of concrete: 1,790 cubic yards (1,370 m3)
Amount of steel reinforcement: 434,000 pounds (197,000 kg)

Construction cost $14,700,000

See also

Notes

  1. Jackson, Donald C. (1988). Great American Bridges and Dams. Wiley. pp. 245–246. ISBN 0-471-14385-5.
  2. 1 2 See external Structurae links, below
  3. 1 2 National Park Service (2010-07-09). "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service.
  4. Ghiglieri, Michael P.; Myers, Thomas M. (2001). Over the Edge: Death in Grand Canyon (First Edition, sixth printing, first revision ed.). p. 25. ISBN 0-9700973-0-1. Months later, on June 12, 1928, Lane McDaniels, age 42, was working on the partially constructed Navajo Bridge at River Mile 4. Despite this being the tallest steel bridge in the world at the time, the supervisors vetoed rigging safety netting under the bridge because they were sure that hot rivets dropping by accident might ignite it. McDaniels, unfortunately, missed his footing on a scaffold. He fell. And there being no net, he plummeted about 470 feet into the Colorado River. His fellow workers stared down in horror. They said that, upon impact, McDaniels' body seemed to "burst and flatten out" on the surface of the water. Four steelworkers quit after McDaniels death, not from fear of falling, but from the dismal prospect of being swallowed up by the turbulent waters of the Colorado if they did fall, with no hope that their bodies would ever be recovered.
  5. Placards at the interpretive center.
  6. Navajo Bridge at www.nps.gov

External links

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