Cisco Bridges
Canadian National Railway
The Canadian National bridge is a truss arch bridge, 247 metres (810 ft) long and 67 metres (220 ft) high. The north-west end of the bridge abuts into a near-vertical rock face. The south-east end of the bridge crosses the CPR tracks about 100 metres (330 ft) north of the CPR bridge.
Canadian Pacific Railway
The Canadian Pacific bridge is a 3-span, 160-metre-long (520 ft) truss bridge. There are two short Pratt truss spans at each end of the longer Parker truss main span. The south end of the bridge (on the west bank of the river) enters directly into the Cantilever Bar Tunnel, in the side of the Cisco Bluff.
The original span was built by Joseph Tomlinson and was pre-fabricated in England and shipped to Canada in 1883. The bridge – then one of the longest cantilever spans in North America – was then constructed by the San Francisco Bridge Company. When the current bridge was built at Cisco in 1910, the original span was moved to the Esquimalt and Nanaimo Railway on Vancouver Island to cross the Niagara Creek Canyon (48°28′57″N 123°33′27″W / 48.4825°N 123.5574°W), where it is still in use (now by the Southern Railway of Vancouver Island).
See also
References
- ^ "Cisco Rail Bridges Fraser River B.C. Canada".
- ^ "RailPictures.Net » Photo Search Result » Railroad, Train, Railway Photos, Pictures & News".
- ^ "RailPictures.Net Photo: CN 8865 Canadian National Railway EMD SD70M-2 at Cisco, British Columbia, Canada by Jim Schmitzer".
- ^ "RailPictures.Net Photo: CP 9010 Canadian Pacific Railway EMD SD40-2F at Lytton, British Columbia, Canada by David L. Brook".
- ^ http://www.mccord-museum.qc.ca/largeimages/v1749.jpg
- ^ Turner, R. D.: West of the Great Divide, page 74.
- ^ Batten, Michael (March–April 1985). "The Great Cantilever Bridge 100 Years Later" (PDF). Canadian Rail (385): 4–9. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2013-06-22. Retrieved 2016-01-11.
External links
- Media related to Cisco Bridges at Wikimedia Commons
- Photos at railpictures.net