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Canton Viaduct

Canton Viaduct
Canton Viaduct.jpg
A west side view of the Canton Viaduct looking south with the former Paul Revere Copper Rolling Mill in the background, April 1977
Coordinates 42°09′32″N 71°09′14″W / 42.15889°N 71.15389°W / 42.15889; -71.15389Coordinates: 42°09′32″N 71°09′14″W / 42.15889°N 71.15389°W / 42.15889; -71.15389
Carries

2 tracks (standard gauge) presently serving:

Crosses
Locale Canton, Massachusetts
Other name(s)
  • The Great Wall of Canton
  • Canton's Great Wall
Maintained by Amtrak (owned by the Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority (MBTA)
Heritage status
Characteristics
Design Blind arcade cavity wall
Material
  • Walls - Granite
  • Deck - Reinforced concrete
Total length 615' (built on a one degree )
Width
Height

Varies due to valley contour, built with a stepped foundation.

  • 4' above ground level at southern end
  • 60' above river level
  • 70' maximum height (from foundation to coping)
Longest span 2 at 28' (granite/concrete deck arches over the granite roadway portal)
No. of spans

71 total:

  • 21 at 4' long (cavity ceiling slabs)
  • 6 at 6' long (river portals)
  • 1 at 18' long (concrete roadway portal added in 1953)
  • 1 at 22' long (granite roadway portal)
  • 40 at 24' long (granite/concrete deck arches)
  • 2 at 28' long (granite/concrete deck arches over the granite roadway portal)
Piers in water 7 (15 on land)
Load limit Unknown, currently carries Amtrak's 100-ton Acela Express up to 125 MPH
Clearance above Approximately 21' from top of rails to contact wires of the catenary system
Clearance below
  • 23' under the granite roadway portal
  • 18' under the concrete roadway portal
  • 6' under the six river portals
History
Designer William Gibbs McNeill, Chief Engineer for the Boston & Providence Railroad (B&P)
Construction begin April 20, 1834
Opened July 28, 1835
Statistics
Daily traffic
Canton Viaduct
Location Neponset and Walpole Sts., Canton, Massachusetts
Built 1834
NRHP Reference # 84002870
Added to NRHP September 20, 1984
Canton Viaduct map.svg
Canton River Valley at the intersection of Neponset St. and Walpole St.

2 tracks (standard gauge) presently serving:

Varies due to valley contour, built with a stepped foundation.

71 total:

Canton Viaduct is a blind arcade cavity wall railroad viaduct built in 1834-35 in Canton, Massachusetts, for the Boston and Providence Railroad (B&P).

At its completion, it was the longest (615 feet) and tallest (70 feet) railroad viaduct in the world; today, it is the last surviving viaduct of its kind. It has been in continuous service for 181 years; it now carries high-speed passenger and freight rail service.

The Canton Viaduct's walls are similar to the ancient curtain wall of Rhodes (built about 400 BCE) with rusticated stone. It supports a train deck about 60 feet (18 m) above the Canton River, the east branch (tributary) of the Neponset River. The stream pool passes through six semi-circular portals in the viaduct, flowing to a waterfall about 50 feet downstream.

The viaduct was the final link built for the B&P's then 41-mile mainline between Boston, Massachusetts; and Providence, Rhode Island. Today, the viaduct serves Amtrak's Northeast Corridor, as well as Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority (MBTA) Providence/Stoughton Line commuter trains. It sits 0.3 miles (0.5 km) south of Canton Junction, at milepost 213.74, reckoned from Pennsylvania Station in New York City, and at the MBTA's milepost 15.35, reckoned from South Station in Boston.


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Wikipedia

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