Monday, April 8, 2013

Amador County, California Bridges: Fiddletown Road Bridge across the North Fork of Dry Creek

April 2013 (38.50167°, -120.78639°) Fiddletown Road Bridge 
Upstream from the State Route 49 bridge, Dry Creek splits into several forks. The North Fork goes through an undeveloped region and then runs parallel to Fiddletown Road for several miles, crossing and then recrossing the road.

The North Fork Dry Creek Bridge (26C0053) supports Fiddletown Road at the location where Dry Creek suddenly shifts from the south to the north side of the road. It's a single span cast-in-place box girder bridge that was built in 2007. That seems to be the year that Amador County upgraded many of their roads with new bridges. The bridge is 135 ft long and 32 ft wide with two lanes and wide shoulders. The current bridge carries about 2000 vehicles a day on a road that carries traffic from SR49 to SR88 and then through Carson Pass into Nevada.

The current bridge replaced a little (25 ft long) arch bridge that was built in 1930, rehabilitated in 1960, and replaced in 2007. We'll take a look at another North Fork Bridge on Fiddletown Road tomorrow.
Creative Commons License
Amador County, California Bridges: Fiddletown Road Bridge across the North Fork of Dry Creek by Mark Yashinsky is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 United States License.

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