Jump to content

Featured Replies

Posted

Located south of Cincinnati, Ohio along the Licking River and U.S. Route 27 is Pendleton County, Kentucky. Comprised of rolling hills and only one town of any significant population – Falmouth, the county boasts several historic bridges that are both active and abandoned. The first span I visited was the Kentucky State Route 177 Bridge spanning the South Fork Licking River for 637 feet at Butler was constructed in 1936 as a Parker through truss. It was given a new battleship gray paint job in 2010.

 

1

20111030-_dsc2459.jpg

 

2

20111030-_dsc2461.jpg

 

3

20111030-_dsc2462.jpg

 

Just to the south was the Catawba Road Bridge over a CSX Transportation railroad line (former Louisville and Nashville Railroad) is a timber stringer span. It has a poor bridge deck and is structurally deficient.

 

4

20111030-_dsc2467.jpg

 

5

20111030-_dsc2473.jpg

 

6

20111030-_dsc2475.jpg

 

7

20111030-_dsc2472.jpg

 

Located in the county seat of Falmouth, the Kentucky State Route 22 Bridge over the Licking River is a two-span Parker through truss that was constructed in 1927. The blue-hued bridge was rehabilitated in 1972 and is currently structurally deficient because of the poor condition of the bridge deck and superstructure. Compare the top photograph, taken in February 2008 to the remainder, photographed in late October 2011. The paint has become considerably distressed.

 

8

20080209-dsc_6879.jpg

 

9

20111030-_dsc2546.jpg

 

10

20111030-_dsc2540.jpg

 

The South Fork Grassy Creek Bridge (KY 1657) includes two crossings, one of which is abandoned. The spans are located in rural Pendleton County, Kentucky. The abandoned bridge, a Pratt through truss, was closed to traffic in 1964. It is used today to ferry cattle across the creek.

 

11

20111030-_dsc2483.jpg

 

12 The abutments are in poor condition.

20111030-_dsc2485.jpg

 

13

20111030-_dsc2488.jpg

 

14

20111030-_dsc2495.jpg

 

15

20111030-_dsc2515.jpg

 

16

20111030-_dsc2503.jpg

 

17

20111030-_dsc2504.jpg

 

18

20111030-_dsc2505.jpg

 

19

20111030-_dsc2509.jpg

 

20

20111030-_dsc2513.jpg

 

21

20111030-_dsc2517.jpg

 

22

20111030-_dsc2481.jpg

 

Enjoy these photographs of the bridges of Pendleton County, Kentucky!

 

Blog post:

A. Bridges of Pendleton County, Kentucky: http://bridgestunnels.com/2011/11/03/bridges-of-pendleton-county-kentucky/

 

Pages:

B. South Fork Licking River Bridge (KY 177): http://bridgestunnels.com/bridges/kentucky/south-fork-licking-river-bridge-ky-177/

C. Catawba Road Bridge: http://bridgestunnels.com/bridges/kentucky/catawba-road-bridge/

D. Licking River Bridge (KY 22): http://bridgestunnels.com/bridges/kentucky/licking-river-bridge-ky-22/

E. South Fork Grassy Creek Bridge (KY 1657): http://bridgestunnels.com/bridges/kentucky/south-fork-grassy-creek-bridge-ky-1657/

Great shots.

"You don't just walk into a bar and mix it up by calling a girl fat" - buildingcincinnati speaking about new forumers

Some really decent research and footwork on your part, Sherman.  These troubled structures surely illustrate "the past as present."  Thank you!

Enjoyed these. Thanks.

Create an account or sign in to comment

Recently Browsing 0

  • No registered users viewing this page.