Second Life of a Tied-Arch Bridge

After more than a century of service in Lawrence, Massachusetts, a historic work of structural engineering found a new home at Merrimack College.

Engineering

Current Issue

This Article From Issue

March-April 2015

Volume 103, Number 2
Page 94

DOI: 10.1511/2015.113.94

Early last fall I gave a talk at Merrimack College in North Andover, Massachusetts, about 25 miles north of Boston. After the question-and-answer period, an engineering professor introduced himself to me and asked if I had seen the historic bridge in front of the college’s science and engineering building. I had known there was a reconstructed iron bridge on the campus, and I was grateful for the reminder. On our way off campus, my wife and I took a slight detour, and I am glad that we did. Seeing the 150-year-old bridge motivated me to seek out information about its design and its engineer, which in turn led me to a fascinating bit of technological history.

Photograph by Martin Stupich; images courtesy of the Library of Congress.

To access the full article, please log in or subscribe.

American Scientist Comments and Discussion

To discuss our articles or comment on them, please share them and tag American Scientist on social media platforms. Here are links to our profiles on Twitter, Facebook, and LinkedIn.

If we re-share your post, we will moderate comments/discussion following our comments policy.