List of bridges of Pittsburgh


The Bridges of Pittsburgh play an important role in the city's transportation system. Without bridges, the Pittsburgh region would be a series of fragmented valleys, hillsides, river plains, and isolated communities.
A 2006 study determined that Pittsburgh has 446 bridges, and with its proximity to three major rivers and countless hills and ravines, Pittsburgh is known as "The City of Bridges". The city of Pittsburgh and Allegheny County may be the largest owners of bridges in the country in proportion to their size, possibly exceeding the larger but flatter City of New York, which has boroughs on three large islands - Manhattan, Staten, and Long - and the mainland, in addition to numerous small islands.
According to a 2011 study by Transportation for America, 1,194 bridges in the Pittsburgh area—or 30.4%—were deficient, the highest proportion in the nation.

History

Pittsburgh's first river bridges, made of wood and long since replaced, opened in 1818 at Smithfield Street and 1819 at Sixth Street. The city's oldest in-service bridge is the current Smithfield Street Bridge, which opened in 1883; it was designated a National Historic Landmark in 1976. Pittsburgh waged a massive road and bridge building campaign from 1924 to 1940; most of Pittsburgh's oldest major bridges date from this period. The coming of the Interstate Highway System triggered more construction in the second half of the twentieth century, as vehicular speed and throughput requirements increased. The result of more than 100 years of bridge building is a collection of most of the major types of bridge, mostly built from locally produced steel, including about forty river spans.
Many of the bridges in the Downtown area are colored Aztec Gold, either constructed as such or painted afterward, to match the city's official colors of black and gold. A few old and out-of-service bridges, such as the Hot Metal Bridge, are exceptions to this rule.

Major bridges

This table lists all bridges crossing the Allegheny, Monongahela and Ohio rivers in the City of Pittsburgh limits.

[Monongahela River]

CrossingCarriesImageCoordinates
Fort Pitt Bridge
Smithfield Street BridgeSmithfield Street
Panhandle BridgePort Authority T Light Rail Line
Liberty BridgeConnects Liberty Tunnel to Downtown Pittsburgh
South Tenth Street BridgeSouth Tenth Street
Birmingham BridgeConnects Fifth and Forbes avenues to East Carson Street
Hot Metal BridgeGreat Allegheny Passage/Three Rivers Heritage Trail,
Hot Metal Street
Glenwood Bridge PA 885
Glenwood B&O Railroad BridgeAllegheny Valley Railroad
Homestead Grays Bridge Blue Belt

[Allegheny River]

CrossingCarriesImageCoordinates
Fort Duquesne Bridge
Roberto Clemente Bridge6th Street
Andy Warhol Bridge7th Street
Rachel Carson Bridge9th Street
Fort Wayne Railroad BridgeAllegheny Valley Railroad, Capitol Limited, Norfolk Southern Railway Fort Wayne Line
Veterans Bridge Interstate 579
David McCullough Bridge16th Street
Herr's Island Railroad Bridge
'
Three Rivers Heritage Trail
30th Street Bridge '30th Street
William Raymond Prom Memorial Bridge31st Street
33rd Street Railroad BridgeAllegheny Valley Railroad P&W Subdivision
Washington Crossing Bridge
40th Street
Senator Robert D. Fleming Bridge
PA Route 8
Highland Park Bridge Blue Belt
Brilliant Branch Railroad BridgeAllegheny Valley Railroad Brilliant Branch

[Ohio River]

CrossingCarriesImageCoordinates
McKees Rocks Bridge SR 3104 / Blue Belt
Ohio Connecting Railroad BridgeNorfolk Southern Railway Fort Wayne Line
West End Bridge U.S. Route 19

Pittsburgh

This table lists some other major bridges within the City of Pittsburgh limits.
BridgeCarriesOverImage
Bloomfield Bridge
Brilliant Cutoff Viaduct
Charles Anderson Memorial Bridge
Commercial Street BridgeNine Mile Run, Commercial Street
Frazier Street Bridge
Larimer Avenue BridgeLarimer Avenue PA 8
Meadow Street BridgeMeadow StreetNegley Run Boulevard
Panther Hollow Bridge
Schenley BridgeSchenley Drive
Swinburne BridgeFrazier Street

Notable bridges