Viaducts of Atlanta
The Viaducts of Atlanta were mainly created in the 1920s to bridge numerous level crossings of roads and railroads.
Atlanta was founded as a railroad city. It had at least six major rail lines entering the city. There were many places where pedestrian traffic encountered that on the rails. The first viaduct was just the Broad Street bridge which was rebuilt several times, the second wooden version designed by Lemuel Grant in 1865[1] but longer viaducts were coming.
Downtown viaducts
- Mitchell Street (1899), which crosses the Central of Georgia Railway tracks[2]
- Peachtree Street (opened October 9, 1901) at a cost of $76,662.38.[3] Rebuilt (opened October 1, 2007) at a cost of $6.7 million[4]
- Courtland Street (1906), which crosses the Georgia Railroad tracks. Demolished and rebuilt (opened October 8th, 2018). [5]
- Washington Street (1909), which crosses the Central of Georgia Railroad tracks[6]
- Spring Street (opened December 20, 1923) – 1,900 feet (580 m).[7] Southern half rebuilt (1996), northern half being rebuilt (2014–2015).
- Pryor Street (1929) – 1,291 feet (393 m)
- Central Avenue viaduct (1929) – 1,174 feet (358 m)
- Hunter Street lateral – 914 feet (279 m)
- Alabama Street lateral – 776 feet (237 m)
- Wall Street lateral – 695 feet (212 m)[8]
- Techwood Drive Viaduct
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 Parkway.).[9]
Gallery of viaduct plaques
- Pryor Street and Central Avenue viaducts
- Techwood Drive Viaduct
References
- Garrett, Franklin, Atlanta and Its Environs, 1954, University of Georgia Press.
- Hoffman, Phillip, "Creating Underground Atlanta, 1898-1932", Atlanta Historical Bulletin, Vol. XIII, No. 3, 1968
Notes
- ^ Galloway, Tammy H. "Lemuel Grant (1817–1893)." New Georgia Encyclopedia. 10 January 2014. Web. 26 February 2015.
- ^ Garrett, Vol.II, p.388-389
- ^ Garrett, Vol.II, p.409
- ^ A detour no more. Atlanta Journal-Constitution September 29, 2007.
- ^ "$25M downtown Atlanta bridge redo primed for October completion". August 23, 2018.
- ^ Garrett, Vol.II, p.306
- ^ Hoffman, p.61
- ^ Garrett, Vol.II, p.849
- ^ "First trip made across viaduct", Atlanta Constitution, January 24, 1913, p,5
- v
- t
- e
- Standing Peachtree
- Historic districts
- Buildings listed on National Register: (Atlanta in Fulton Co.)
- (Atlanta in DeKalb Co.)
- Demolished buildings
- Demolished public housing projects
- Atlanta Campaign
- Atlanta in the Civil War
- Battle of Atlanta
- Battle of Ezra Church
- Battle of Jonesborough
- Battle of Kennesaw Mountain
- Battle of Peachtree Creek
- Battle of Utoy Creek
- Burning of Atlanta
- Stone Mountain
- Race massacre (1906)
- Ripper (1911)
- Leo Frank lynching (1915)
- Temple bombing (1958)
- Peyton Road affair (1962–1963)
- Child murders (1979–1981)
- Prison riots (1987)
- Centennial Olympic Park bombing (1996)
- Otherside Lounge bombing (1997)
- Day trading firm shootings (1999)
- Shooting of Kathryn Johnston (2006)
- Public schools cheating scandal (2009–2015)
- Shooting of Scout Schultz (2017)
- Ransomware attack (2018)
- Killing of Rayshard Brooks (2020)
- Spa shootings (2021)
- Northside Hospital shooting (2023)
- Great Atlanta Fire (1917)
- Winecoff Hotel fire (1946)
- Air France Flight 007 crash (1962)
- Bluffton University bus crash (2007)
- Tornado strikes downtown (2008)
- Interstate 85 bridge collapse (2017)
- Timeline
- International Cotton Exposition (1881)
- Piedmont Exposition (1887)
- Cotton States and International Exposition (1895)
- Gone with the Wind premiere (1939)
- Funeral of Martin Luther King Jr. (1968)
- Atlanta International Pop Festival (1969, 1970)
- Democratic National Convention (1988)
- Super Bowl XXVIII (1994)
- World Series (1991, 1992, 1995, 1996, 1999, 2021)
- Summer Olympics (1996)
- WrestleMania XXVII (2011)
- Super Bowl LIII (2019)
- Washerwomen strike (1881)
- Fulton Bag and Cotton Mills strike (1914–1915)
- Streetcar strike (1916)
- Transit strike (1950)
- Scripto strike (1964–1965)
- Sanitation strike (1977)
- Sanitation strike (2018)
- School bus drivers' strike (2018)
- Library perversion case (1953)
- Lonesome Cowboys police raid (1969)
- Atlanta Pride (1971)
- Atlanta Eagle police raid (2009)
- History by neighborhood
- Former neighborhoods and settlements
- Annexations and city wards
- Street names
- History of Georgia Tech
- Historic mills
- Zero Mile Post
- Atlanta sit-ins (1960-1961)
- Freeway revolts
- Occupy Atlanta (2011–2012)
- George Floyd protests (2020)
- Stop Cop City (2021–present)
- Atlanta Transit Company (1950)
- Historic bridges
- Historic ferries
- Streetcars
- MARTA (1972)
- Western and Atlantic Railroad (1836)
- Trolleybuses
- Viaducts
- History of Atlanta
- Timeline of Atlanta history
This Atlanta, Georgia–related article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e
This U.S. state of Georgia road or road transport-related article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e