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Champlain Bridge (United States)

Champlain Bridge
Champlain bridge.JPG
Previous Champlain Bridge viewed from Chimney Point State Historic Site, Vermont
Coordinates 44°01′57″N 73°25′24″W / 44.03250°N 73.42333°W / 44.03250; -73.42333
Carries Two lanes of NY 185 and VT 17
Crosses Lake Champlain
Locale Crown Point, New York and Chimney Point, Vermont
Other name(s) Crown Point Bridge
Maintained by NYSDOT and VTrans
ID number 5521180
Characteristics
Design Continuous truss (combination of through truss, deck truss, and deck plate girders)
Total length 14 spans totaling 2,184 feet (666 m)
Width 26.1 feet (8.0 m)
Longest span 434 feet (132 m)
History
Construction cost $1,149,032.63
Opened August 26, 1929
Closed October 16, 2009 (closure)
December 28, 2009 (demolition)
Statistics
Daily traffic 3,510 (2007)
Toll 1929–1987

The Champlain Bridge (also known as the Crown Point Bridge) was a 2,184 feet (666 m) long vehicular bridge in the United States that traversed Lake Champlain between Crown Point, New York and Chimney Point, Vermont. It was opened to traffic in 1929 as a toll bridge; the tolls were removed in 1987. The bridge was closed due to safety concerns in October 2009 and was taken down by explosive demolition on December 28, 2009. A replacement bridge opened on November 7, 2011.

It was one of only two bridges connecting New York and Vermont across Lake Champlain. Ferries provide connections between the states at other points along the lake. The bridge connected NY 185 in New York to VT 17 in Vermont. The half-mile, two-lane, continuous truss bridge was jointly owned and maintained by the New York State Department of Transportation and the Vermont Agency of Transportation.

The bridge crossed Lake Champlain at a point 12 miles (19 km) north of Ticonderoga, New York, and 32 miles (51 km) south of Burlington, Vermont. It connected NY 185 in Crown Point, New York, to VT 17 in Chimney Point, Vermont. It stood at one of only two bridge sites that link New York and Vermont across the lake. The other bridge is on U.S. Route 2, spanning between Rouses Point, New York and Alburgh, Vermont, near the Canada–United States border.


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