Oregon - Estados Unidos
Fotografia - Estados Unidos
The Fremont Bridge is a steel tied-arch bridge over the Willamette River located in Portland, Oregon, United States. It carries Interstate 405 and US 30 traffic between
downtown and North Portland where it intersects with Interstate 5. It has the
longest main span of any bridge in Oregon and is the second longest tied-arch bridge in the
world (after Caiyuanba Bridge across
the Yangtze River, China). The
bridge was designed by Parsons, Brinckerhoff, Quade and
Douglas, and built by Murphy Pacific Corporation.
The bridge has two decks carrying vehicular
traffic, each with four lanes. The upper deck is signed westbound on US 30 and
southbound on I-405. The lower deck is signed eastbound on US 30 and northbound
on I-405.
Due to the public's dissatisfaction with the
appearance of the Marquam Bridge, the
Portland Art Commission was invited to participate in the design process of the
Fremont. The improvement in visual quality resulted in a bridge that was nearly
six times as expensive as the purposely economical Marquam Bridge. Designers
modeled the bridge after the original 1964 Port Mann Bridge in Vancouver, British Columbia.
The steel tie-girder (I-beam) is 18-feet tall and 50-in wide. On October 28, 1971,
while still under construction, a six-foot-long crack was found on the west span
of this girder that required a $5.5 million redesign and repair. The ramps
and approaches are steel box girders. If the lanes of the bridge were placed
end-to-end, there are 3.27 lane-miles on the arch bridge and 14.12 lane-miles
on the ramps and approaches.
The center span of the bridge, where the rib
of the arch is above the deck, is 902 feet long. It was fabricated
in California then assembled at Swan Island, 1.7
miles (2.7 km) downstream. After assembly it was floated on a barge the
1.7 mile trip to the construction site. On March 16, 1973, the 6,000-ton
steel arch span was lifted 170 ft (52 m) using 32 hydraulic jacks. At the time, it was listed in the Guinness Book of World Records as
the heaviest lift ever completed.
The bridge was opened on November 15, 1973, at
a final cost of $82 million, most of which was financed by the Federal Highway Administration.
In 1976, an American flag and an Oregon flag were added atop the structure as part of the
bicentennial celebration for the United States. The flags were installed
with the use of a helicopter. The 15-by-25-foot (4.6 m
× 7.6 m) flags are attached to 50-foot (15 m) tall flagpoles at
the crest of the arches.
The bridge as well as Portland's associated Fremont
Street were named for John C. Fremont (1813–1890).
Fremont was an early explorer of the Oregon Country. He served in the United
States Army at the time as a Captain and later promoted to General.
In 1856, he ran for president, but was defeated by James Buchanan.

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