Photos 

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Overview from the west

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Side view of main span

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Oblique view of main span

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Northern approach

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South tower

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Lower level

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Counterweights

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Stone pier

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Plaque

1910   1911
Missouri River Bridge
Built by
Union Depot Bridge & Terminal R.R. Co.
F.W. Fratt President
---
Waddell & Harrington
Consulting Engineers
Kansas City, Mo.
---
Contractors for Superstructure and Erection
McClintic Marshall Construction Co.
Contractors for Piles
American Concrete Co.
Contractors for Substructure
James O'Connor & Son
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South portal

The following photos were taken from the adjacent Heart of America bridge
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Main span from east

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Hoisting system at midspan

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Kansas City skyline

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Aerial view with span lowered

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Aerial view with span raised

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Aerial view of south approach

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Aerial view of north approach

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Upper level

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Lower level

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South abutment

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South approach truss

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Underneath south approach

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North approach truss

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North approach bent

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North abutment

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On top of main span

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South end machinery house

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Counterweight sheaves

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Patent plaque

Waddell & Harrington Lift Bridge
Patented in U.S.A. Aug. 2 1909 Mar.
22 1910 Mar. 29 1910 May 21 1911
Other Patents Pending
Patented in Canada February 1 1910 March 9 1910

Map 

Vicinity Map

Vicinity map

Map links:

Historic significance 

Researched 04/30/2008

The A.S.B. Bridge is the only one of its type and design ever constructed anywhere else worldwide, this, only because of its lift span. The vertical lift span carries the lower railroad deck, and can allows the hangers from the lower deck to be contracted into the truss members of the upper deck, thus allowing auto traffic to continue on top, even when the lower lever is raised for river traffic.

Facts 

Overview
Vertical-lift through truss bridge over the Missouri River on the BNSF Railroad in Kansas City
Status
Open to railroad traffic
History
Construction started 1909 and opened to traffic on December 28, 1911
Builders
- American Concrete Co. (Piles)
- James O'Connor & Son (Substructure)
- McClintic-Marshall Co. of Chicago, Illinois (Superstructure and Erection)
- Waddell & Harrington (Consulting engineers)
Design
From south to north, as originally built:
Two deck plate girder spans, total length 92 ft.
One Baltimore through truss span, length 285.9 ft.
Five deck plate girder spans, total length 287 ft.
Six deck plate girder spans, total length 428 ft.
One vertical-lift Baltimore through truss, 428 ft.
One fixed Baltimore deck truss, 428 ft.
One fixed Baltimore deck truss, 426 ft.
Twenty-five deck plate girder spans, total length 1399 ft.
One Baltimore through truss, length 129 ft.
Five deck plate girder spans, total length 173 ft.
Dimensions
Length of largest span: 428.0 ft.
Total length: 1,282.0 ft.
Also called
Armour, Swift, Burlington Bridge (full name)
Approximate latitude, longitude
+39.11663, -94.58023   (decimal degrees)
39°06'60" N, 94°34'49" W   (degrees°minutes'seconds")
Approximate UTM coordinates
15/363386/4330908 (zone/easting/northing)
Land survey
T. 50 N., R. 33 W., Sec. 26 and 32
USGS topographic map
Kansas City
Inventory number
BH 21680 (Bridgehunter.com ID)

Categories 

American Concrete Co. (1)
Baltimore truss (44)
Built 1911 (301)
Built during 1910s (3,647)
Burlington Northern Santa Fe Railroad (49)
Clay County, Missouri (36)
Double decker (14)
HAER documented (348)
Jackson County, Missouri (66)
James O'Connor & Son (1)
Kansas City, Missouri (52)
McClintic-Marshall Co. (9)
Missouri (2,450)
Missouri River (59)
Movable (858)
Open (21,823)
Owned by railroad (689)
Span length 250-500 feet (587)
Through truss (5,419)
Truss (16,067)
Vertical lift (180)
Waddell & Harrington (6)

Update Log 

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Comments 

ASB Bridge
Posted March 22, 2008, by John Waver

To answer Kyle, yes and no.

The bridge's old auto deck is being considered for light-rail use, because of its design, the way the lower level can be lifted without stopping traffic on top.

However, light-rail still is very heavy, and with the BNSF railway running heavy-rail below, it may not hold that much.

However, there is a another bridge that is being considered that is not listed on this site, The Second Hannibal Bridge, it is about 400 feet upstream of the A.S.B., and it as well has an abandoned auto deck, but it is a swing bridge, and Kansas City, Missouri thinks that could be a problem, due that both the rail and auto decks would be stopped for river traffic when the span is open, but the A.S.B. would not, as of its lift design.

Another, is the Heart of America bridge, the A.S.B.'s replacement, it is a girder bridge, and it too is not strong enough for light-rail, as it is for automobiles only.

So, the subject is very well open, and the Armour-Swift-Burlington bridge may have the upper deck used again, but, like I said, the heavyness is the problem.

We will all have to wait.

ASB Bridge
Posted March 4, 2008, by kyle

I have heard a rumor that the A.S.B. bridge might be re-habilitated for use with the light rail in kansas city. Is this true or not?

ASB Bridge
Posted February 3, 2008, by Sam

does anyone have any photos of the bridge during the removal of the auto deck?

I would like to see some picutres of it while the upper deck was being removed.

does anyone have any??

ASB Bridge
Posted January 18, 2008, by Local

This bridge is one of two of its type ever made, and is an honor to have this in my town.

I live on Kansas City, so this is kind of fun to have such a rare bridge in my town.

Below is a recent photo of the bridge, and from the looks of it, i think the bridge got a new paint job in the color Brown.

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