Rulo Rail Bridge
This article relies largely or entirely on a single source. (November 2020) |
The Rulo Rail Bridge is a truss bridge across the Missouri River connecting Rulo, Nebraska, with Holt County, Missouri, and is used by the BNSF Railway to transport coal from Wyoming and Colorado to Midwest power plants.
The original bridge was built in 1887. It was fabricated in England and reassembled at Rulo. In the summer of 1977 the steel truss was replaced in 48 hours when sections of the new bridge were assembled on either side of the river, then lifted onto falsework towers on barges on both sides of the up and downstream sides. The new bridge was placed on the upstream towers and the old bridge was moved to the downstream side and then new bridge was placed on the original 1887 piers. The total cost of the operation was $6.7 million.
Prior to the replacement only grain rather than coal trains could cross the bridge.
See also
[edit]- List of bridges documented by the Historic American Engineering Record in Missouri
- List of bridges documented by the Historic American Engineering Record in Nebraska
- List of crossings of the Missouri River
References
[edit]- Lincoln Star (Lincoln, Nebraska), July 7, 1977, Page 5
External links
[edit]- Historic American Engineering Record (HAER) No. NE-4, "Rulo Bridge, Spanning Missouri River, Rulo, Richardson County, NE", 11 photos, 2 photo caption pages
- Railroad bridges in Nebraska
- Railroad bridges in Missouri
- Buildings and structures in Holt County, Missouri
- Buildings and structures in Richardson County, Nebraska
- Bridges completed in 1887
- Bridges over the Missouri River
- BNSF Railway bridges
- Chicago, Burlington and Quincy Railroad
- Historic American Engineering Record in Missouri
- Historic American Engineering Record in Nebraska
- Interstate railroad bridges in the United States
- Steel bridges in the United States