Viaducts of Atlanta

The Viaducts of Atlanta were mainly created in the 1920s to bridge numerous level crossings of roads and railroads.

Atlanta being founded as a railroad city and ending up with at least six major lines entering the city, there were many places where human traffic encountered that on the rails. The first viaduct was just the Broad St. bridge which was rebuilt several times, the second wooden version designed by Lemuel Grant in 1865[1] but longer viaducts were coming.

Downtown viaducts

Other viaducts

In January 1913, the Bellwood Viaduct was opened, allowing car and foot traffic to cross the railroad line parallel to Marietta Street to the west side of the city via Bellwood avenue (now Donald Lee Hollowell Pkwy.).[8]

References

Notes

  1. Galloway, Tammy H. "Lemuel Grant (1817-1893)." New Georgia Encyclopedia. 10 January 2014. Web. 26 February 2015.
  2. Garrett, Vol.II, p.388-389
  3. Garrett, Vol.II, p.409
  4. A detour no more. Atlanta Journal-Constitution September 29, 2007.
  5. Garrett, Vol.II, p.306
  6. Hoffman, p.61
  7. Garrett, Vol.II, p.849
  8. "First trip made across viaduct", Atlanta Constitution, January 24, 1913, p,5


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