Northern Pacific Bridge Number 9

Northern Pacific Bridge #9
Bridge #9 as seen from the 10th Avenue Bridge over the Mississippi River.
Coordinates44°58′39″N 93°14′28″W / 44.97750°N 93.24111°W / 44.97750; -93.24111
CarriesBike and pedestrian lanes; formerly two railroad tracks
CrossesMississippi River
LocaleMinneapolis, Minnesota
Maintained byCity of Minneapolis
ID number94246
Characteristics
DesignTruss bridge
Total length952 feet
Width24 feet
Longest span245 feet
Clearance below39 feet
History
Opened1924
Location
Map

Northern Pacific Bridge #9 is a deck truss bridge that spans the Mississippi River in Minneapolis, Minnesota, between the Seven Corners area and the University of Minnesota campus. It was built in 1924 and was designed by Frederick W. Cappelen.[1] Railroad use of the bridge ended in 1981, and in 1999 the bridge was opened to bicycles and pedestrians. It replaced the former Northern Pacific "A Line" bridge.[2][3]

  1. ^ Denis Gardner (2008). Wood, Concrete, Stone, and Steel: Minnesota's Historic Bridges. U of Minnesota Press. pp. 207–. ISBN 978-0-8166-4666-1.
  2. ^ Marcia Ohlhausen, “Northern Pacific Bridge Number 9,” June 24, 1994, Minnesota Architecture-History Inventory Form, available at SHPO, MHS, St. Paul, 8.2; El-Hai, Lost Minnesota, 4.
  3. ^ F. B. Maltby, “The Mississippi River Bridges,” Journal of Western Society of Engineers [July–August 1903]