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Willimansett Bridge

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The Willimansett Bridge is a steel truss bridge over the Connecticut River located between Chicopee, Massachusetts and Holyoke, Massachusetts . It carries Massachusetts state routes 116 and 141 .

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4-516: Prior to its construction, a "free bridge at Willamansett" was discussed at least as early as 1886, with the Commonwealth's committee on roads and bridges visiting the site in an official capacity on March 18, 1886. The bridge was built in 1891 by Richard F. Hawkins Ironworks(superstructure) and Wright Lyons and Company (substructure) with Edward S. Shaw as engineer at an original cost of $ 178,326.69. The bridge received new weight restrictions in

8-484: The project. The original contractor went bankrupt, causing a 9-month delay. Northern Construction took over the work. In 2014, an additional cost $ 3 million was added to the project. The bridge re-opened on June 12, 2015. This article about a bridge in Massachusetts is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . Edward S. Shaw Edward Sargent Shaw (October 26, 1853 – October 3, 1919 )

12-469: The summer of 2007. A refurbishment project began in August 2011. The $ 19 million project included bridge deck replacement, sidewalk replacement, bridge rail replacement, substructure repairs, cleaning & painting of structural steel. Girders, steel trusses and one or more of the piers will be replaced. The bridge closed to traffic during the 2.5 year planned construction but was usable by pedestrians during

16-675: Was a prominent civil engineer who lived in Cambridge, Massachusetts . Born on October 26, 1853, he spent most of his life in Cambridge, and graduated from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology with a bachelor's degree in civil engineering in the class of 1874; his thesis being a design for a Murphy-Whipple truss bridge . Immediately following graduation he continued his studies in some non-degree capacity at his alma mater. During his professional career, his office

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