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Harrison Avenue Bridge

Harrison Avenue Bridge
Harrison Avenue Bridge - March 2015.jpg
The Harrison Avenue Bridge in March 2015, with the Central Scranton Expressway under the right-most arch.
Carries Harrison Avenue (State Route 6011)
Crosses Roaring Brook and Central Scranton Expressway
Locale Scranton, Pennsylvania
Other name(s) South-East Scranton Viaduct
Maintained by PennDOT
Characteristics
Design Open-spandrel deck arch
Material Concrete
Total length 407 feet (124 m)
Width 40 feet (12 m)
Longest span 202 feet (62 m)
No. of spans 3
History
Designer Abraham Burton Cohen
Constructed by Anthracite Bridge Company
Harrison Avenue Bridge
Harrison Avenue Bridge PA.jpg
The Harrison Avenue Bridge in 1999.
Harrison Avenue Bridge is located in Pennsylvania
Harrison Avenue Bridge
Location in Pennsylvania
Coordinates 41°24′00″N 75°39′05″W / 41.400000°N 75.651388°W / 41.400000; -75.651388Coordinates: 41°24′00″N 75°39′05″W / 41.400000°N 75.651388°W / 41.400000; -75.651388
Area less than one acre
Built 1922
MPS Highway Bridges Owned by the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, Department of Transportation TR
NRHP Reference # 88000767
Added to NRHP June 22, 1988

Harrison Avenue Bridge is a concrete deck arch bridge carrying Harrison Avenue (unsigned SR 6011) in Scranton, Pennsylvania, United States. Its three spans include an open-spandrel ribbed arch over Roaring Brook, flanked by two closed-spandrel arches. The southwestern closed-spandrel arch spans the former Lackawanna and Wyoming Valley Railroad (Laurel Line), converted to highway use in 1964 as the Central Scranton Expressway. The northeastern closed-spandrel arch spans the former Delaware, Lackawanna and Western Railroad, now a heritage railroad operated by Steamtown National Historic Site.

Built in 1921-1922, the bridge is notable as an example of Progressive Era civic involvement, its construction having been promoted by a citizens' group called the South to East Scranton Bridge Association. It was designed by New York City-based consulting engineer Abraham Burton Cohen, although Scranton Department of Public Works chief engineer William A. Schunk and his assistant Charles F. Schroeder were more actively involved in day-to-day supervision of construction. The bridge was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1988.


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