Liberty Bridge at Falls Park on the Reedy
It has been suggested that this article be merged into Falls Park on the Reedy. (Discuss) Proposed since November 2016. |
Liberty Bridge at Falls Park on the Reedy | |
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Coordinates | 34°50′40.3″N 82°24′4.7″W / 34.844528°N 82.401306°W |
Carries | Pedestrians |
Crosses | Reedy River |
Locale | Greenville, South Carolina |
Characteristics | |
Design | Single suspension with 2 inclined towers |
Total length | 345 ft (105 m) |
Width | 12 ft (3.7 m) |
Longest span | 200 ft (61 m) |
History | |
Construction start | 2003 |
Construction end | 2004 |
Opened | 2004 |
Location | |
The Liberty Bridge at Falls Park on the Reedy is a pedestrian bridge in Greenville, South Carolina.
Description
Downtown Greenville is bisected by a wooded valley park containing the falls of the Reedy River. The Liberty Bridge is located just downstream from this group of waterfalls, replacing a six-lane highway bridge that was demolished to improve the visibility and accessibility to the falls and adjacent park. The bridge has a curved clear span over the river that curves away from the falls, providing visitors with an aerial amphitheater from which to view the cascading water. The link gently slopes into the ravine and is supported by twin inclined towers and a single suspension cable with thin cable suspenders only on the side away from the falls, allowing for unobstructed views. The bridge, with a total length of approximately 345 ft (105 m) and a clear span of 200 ft (61 m), appears to float over the landscape. The twin towers and suspension cable are visible from vantage points around the city, calling attention and drawing visitors to the public park, falls and river.
Design and construction
The Liberty Bridge was completed in 2004, with Miguel Rosales of Boston-based transportation architects Rosales + Partners providing conceptual, preliminary, and final designs, construction services, and community participation to the City of Greenville.[1] Rosales + Partners collaborated with structural engineers Schlaich Bergermann & Partner and Arbor Engineering.[2]
Awards
- 2015 The Rudy Bruner Award for Urban Excellence - Silver Medalist
- 2008 Waterfront Center Excellence on the Waterfront Award - Park/Walkway/Recreational Category
- 2007 IALD International Lighting Design Award of Merit
- 2006 Outstanding Civil Engineering Achievement Merit Award, American Society of Civil Engineers
- 2006 Most Distinguished Award for Excellence in Recreation and Entertainment Structures, American Galvanizing Assoc.
- 2006 Pinnacle Award for Best Project, Heavy Highway & Bridge Category, Carolinas Associated General Contractors.
- 2005 Arthur G. Hayden Medal for a single recent outstanding achievement in bridge engineering demonstrating innovation in special use bridges.
- 2005 Bridge Prize for special purpose bridges from the National Steel Bridge Alliance
- 2005 International Footbridge Award in the aesthetics category (medium span), awarded in Venice, Italy.
References
- ^ http://greenvillejournal.com/local/3656-a-park-s-birthday-a-city-s-rebirth.html A park’s birthday, a city’s rebirth
- ^ http://www.fallspark.com/pages/Creators.aspx/
External links
- Falls Park official website
- Liberty Bridge engineering details
- Liberty Bridge at Structurae
- Miguel Rosales, Liberty Bridge Architect
- Celebrating the 10th anniversary of Falls Park, the “crown jewel” that helped bring the green back to downtown Greenville
- Liberty Bridge, Falls Park transformed downtown
- City to Celebrate 10th Anniversary of Falls Park
- Liberty Bridge a ‘transformative work of art’