Photos 

< Previous   (1 of 11)   Next >

Overview

Photos taken October 2007 by James Baughn
< Previous   (2 of 11)   Next >

Arch

< Previous   (3 of 11)   Next >

Deck view

< Previous   (4 of 11)   Next >

Decorative column

< Previous   (5 of 11)   Next >

East abutment

< Previous   (6 of 11)   Next >

Looking east

< Previous   (7 of 11)   Next >

Looking west

< Previous   (8 of 11)   Next >

Missing plaque

< Previous   (9 of 11)   Next >

Old highway

< Previous   (10 of 11)   Next >

Railing

< Previous   (11 of 11)   Next >

Underneath

Map 

Vicinity Map

Vicinity map

Map links:

Facts 

Overview
Three-span open-spandrel arch bridge over Salt Fork on Eastwood Street (Old MO 240) in Marshall
Location
Saline County, Missouri
Status
Open to traffic
History
Built 1922
Design
Open-spandrel arch
Dimensions
Length of largest span: 89.9 ft.
Total length: 280.9 ft.
Deck width: 18.7 ft.
Recognition
Eligible for the National Register of Historic Places
Approximate latitude, longitude
+39.12333, -93.16333   (decimal degrees)
39°07'24" N, 93°09'48" W   (degrees°minutes'seconds")
Approximate UTM coordinates
15/485881/4330475 (zone/easting/northing)
Land survey
T. 50 N., R. 21 W., Sec. 12
USGS topographic map
Marshall South
Inventory numbers
MONBI 24320 (Missouri bridge number on the National Bridge Inventory)
BH 36133 (Bridgehunter.com ID)
Inspection (as of 03/2008)
Deck condition rating: Poor (4 out of 9)
Superstructure condition rating: Poor (4 out of 9)
Substructure condition rating: Satisfactory (6 out of 9)
Appraisal: Structurally deficient
Sufficiency rating: 17.5 (out of 100)
Average daily traffic (as of 2008)
300

Categories 

Arch (7,666)
Built 1922 (344)
Built during 1920s (4,733)
Deck arch (6,750)
MO 240 (3)
Missouri (2,513)
NR-eligible (2,578)
Open (21,983)
Open-spandrel arch (224)
Owned by county (14,329)
Saline County, Missouri (40)
Span length 75-100 feet (3,306)
Structurally deficient (12,029)
Total length 250-500 feet (2,171)

Update Log 

Post a comment here · Contact webmaster

Comments 

Eastwood Street Arch Bridge
Posted October 25, 2007, by Anonymous

Once again, it seems a shame that all these interesting, historic bridges are being razed.