Hurricane Gulch Bridge

Coordinates: 63°0′54″N 149°37′0″W / 63.01500°N 149.61667°W / 63.01500; -149.61667
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Hurricane Gulch Bridge
Coordinates63°0′54″N 149°37′0″W / 63.01500°N 149.61667°W / 63.01500; -149.61667
CarriesAlaska Railroad
CrossesHurricane Gulch (tributary of Chulitna River)
LocaleHurricane Gulch
Maintained byAlaska Railroad
Characteristics
DesignArch
Width8 ft (2.4 m), 1 track with a walkway on one side
Longest span918 ft (279.8 m)
Clearance aboveDeck arch, unlimited clearance
Clearance below296 ft (90 m)
History
OpenedAugust 15, 1921
Location
Map
Shadow of the Hurricane Gulch bridge taken from a train crossing over it

The Hurricane Gulch Bridge is a 918 ft (280 m) long steel arch railroad bridge that crosses Hurricane Gulch, Alaska. It is located at milepost 284.2, counting from Seward. At 296 ft above the Hurricane creek, it is both the longest and tallest bridge on the entire Alaska Railroad. Many of Alaska Railroad's passenger routes pass over this bridge, including the Denali Star, the Aurora Winter and the flag-stop Hurricane Turn, in addition to freight routes.[1][2]

A road bridge by the same name also exists.[where?]

Construction[edit]

Construction of this bridge by the American Bridge Company began in early 1921. The first steel was erected in June, and the first passenger train operated on August 15 of the same year. It was the most difficult and expensive bridge project on the railroad, and cost $1.2 million. To build it, the company strung an aerial tram across the gulch, and construction proceeded from both sides simultaneously.[3] For eight years, this was the tallest bridge in the US.

Panorama of Hurricane Gulch taken from the bridge

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Route Map". Alaska Railroad. Retrieved 14 March 2017.
  2. ^ "Freight Routes". Alaska Railroad. Retrieved 14 March 2017.
  3. ^ Combs, John. "Route Map: Hurricane Gulch". John's Alaska Railroad Page. Retrieved 14 March 2017.