Fifth Street Viaduct

Fifth Street Viaduct

1933 Fifth Street Viaduct from the northeast
Coordinates 37°33′12.1″N 77°25′39.1″W / 37.553361°N 77.427528°W / 37.553361; -77.427528Coordinates: 37°33′12.1″N 77°25′39.1″W / 37.553361°N 77.427528°W / 37.553361; -77.427528
Carries Fifth Street
Crosses Bacon's Quarter Branch
Locale Richmond, Virginia
Official name Curtis Holt Sr. Bridge
Other name(s) Fifth Street Bridge
History
Opened 1997

The Fifth Street Viaduct or the Fifth Street Bridge, officially the Curtis Holt Sr. Bridge, is a bridge crossing Bacon's Quarter Branch in the Shockoe Valley of Richmond, Virginia in the United States. It carries automobile and pedestrian traffic between Downtown Richmond's Jackson Ward and Gilpin Court with the North Side's Chestnut Hill and Highland Park.

History

1891 bridge

The first Fifth Street Viaduct, also called the Northside Viaduct, was an iron or steel structure completed in February 1891 for streetcars, which had been introduced in Richmond in 1887.[1]:p.6 It included a vehicular roadway, a walkway, and double-tracked street railway and was described as "a splendid iron structure 40 feet wide and 1200 feet long, costing about $80,000..." in a developer's advertisement at the time.[1]:p.6 The streetcar line allowed for the development of Chestnut Hill and other streetcar suburbs north of the deep Shockoe Valley. Masonry remants of the north abutment of this original bridge are still visible.[1]:p.6

The 1933 Fifth Street Viaduct viewed from the south. The toll house is to the left.

1933 bridge

The second Fifth Street Viaduct was a reinforced concrete bridge built in 1933 to allow for automobile, streetcar, and pedestrian travel between the neighborhoods of Highland Park and Jackson Ward. The design was drafted by Alfredo C. Janni and the bridge built by the Richmond Bridge Corporation.[1]:p.13 The 1,185-foot (360 m) bridge consisted of seven double-span rigid frames supported on expansion piers and stiff towers[1]:p.1, 2 and was one of five Richmond bridges built during 1933-1934 in a major public works program sponsored by the Richmond Bridge Corporation in conjunction with local authorities[1]:p.2

On December 23, 1933, after several days of preliminary streetcar usage, the Fifth Street Viaduct opened for all forms of travel.[1]:p.16 The bridge was tolled until August 1935 and the City of Richmond agreed to retire the debt of the Richmond Bridge Corporation through annual cash payments.[1]:p.17

On July 17, 1941, at the urging of City Council member John Hirshberg, the Fifth Street Viaduct was officially renamed the Stonewall Jackson Memorial Bridge.[1]:p.17

Current bridge

The current Fifth Street Viaduct opened in August 1997. In 2000, the name of the bridge was changed to the Curtis Holt Sr. Bridge.[2] The renaming of the bridge was among several such renamings cited as the impetus for a failed 2004 Virginia Assembly bill to restrict such actions in the commonwealth.[3]

Metal bridge plate on the south end of the 1933 Fifth Street Viaduct

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 "Fifth Street Viaduct: Crossing Bacon's Quarter Branch Valley on Fifth Street, Richmond, Virginia". National Park Service, Historic American Engineering Record. (HAER No. VA-67). Retrieved 10 February 2012.
  2. news-20126 Richmond.com. 15 February 2000. Retrieved 10 February 2012.
  3. "Bill Restricts Changing Va. Historic Names". Washington Times. 29 January 2004. Retrieved 10 February 2012.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 3/13/2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.