Jump to content

Template:Did you know nominations/James D. Pfluger Pedestrian and Bicycle Bridge

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The following is an archived discussion of the DYK nomination of the article below. Please do not modify this page. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page (such as this nomination's talk page, the article's talk page or Wikipedia talk:Did you know), unless there is consensus to re-open the discussion at this page. No further edits should be made to this page.

The result was: promoted by PFHLai (talk) 03:43, 16 November 2015 (UTC)

James D. Pfluger Pedestrian and Bicycle Bridge

[edit]
  • ... that, with a double-hourglass-shaped deck and helical on-ramp, the Pfluger Pedestrian Bridge contains almost no straight lines?

Created by Bryanrutherford0 (talk). Self-nominated at 20:29, 18 October 2015 (UTC).

Review by Maile
  • No QPQ required
Eligibility
  • Article created by Bryanrutherford0 on October 18, 2015 and has 4037 characters (0 words) "readable prose size"
  • Article is NPOV, currently stable, no edit wars, no dispute tags
Sourcing
  • Every paragraph sourced inline and online
  • No bare URLs, and no external links used as inline source
Hook
  • Hook is 125 characters, NPOV, stated in the article and sourced where stated
Image
  • No image used in the nomination; 2 images in the article are the nominator's own, licensed on Commons and covered by FoP US
Tools
  • Duplication Detector and Earwig's tool, plus spot check,s on every online source showed no copyvio/close paraphrasing issues of concern.
Well, this was interesting. That photo in Progressive Engineer really shows the uniqueness of the bridge. I don't suppose you could be convinced to go up in a balloon and take such a photo? Just for DYK? But, if not, this nomination is Good2Go either way. Nice job. Thanks for submitting. — Maile (talk) 22:59, 15 November 2015 (UTC)