In Coal Bluff, Indiana. A CSX line
Originally built in 1906
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thats pretty cool. Thanks for the idea..
There is a prototype for everything - flextrack.
What's the story on that bridge falling over?
J Daddy posted:Looks like the line had 3 rails too!
Four actually....
Here is a bit of the story about the truck and bridge-
http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/...loydminster-1.993653
Looks to me like it was pulled over. Oopsies.
Well at least the equipment is there to start the clean up
Pennsy Stone Arch bridge.
Notice that once again, the railroad is somehow implicated, rather than the story stating the truth. "Railroad bridge collapses" is quite different from what really happened..."Inattentive driver of truck strikes railroad bridge."
Here in the NYC area, we have "parkways" that have clearances that are much lower than "expressways." With the advent of GPS units that can't differentiate between parkways and expressways unless they are specifically programmed to do so, the frequency of truck vs overpass strikes has increased. The traffic news announcers always say that traffic got messed up due to "a truck that WANDERED (sic) onto the parkway." Really? A truck decided to 'wander" away from its driver, while he wasn't looking, and snuck onto the parkway?
This one in northern New Brunswick serves a dual purpose. The one lane road allows just enough room to squeeze through a small creek along side. Just guessing, but the stone abutments probably date to the original construction of the Intercolonial Railway and would have supported a wood truss span. The concrete likely repaired decomposition, relocated mountings and edged the raised roadbed.
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