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Newport Southbank Bridge facts for kids

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Newport Southbank Bridge
Newport Southbank Bridge 2017.jpg
The bridge as viewed from Newport, Kentucky
Carries Pedestrians
Crosses Ohio River
Locale Newport, Kentucky and Cincinnati, Ohio
Other name(s) Purple People Bridge
Characteristics
Design Truss bridge
Total length 2,670 feet (810 m)
Newport and Cincinnati Bridge
Location Spans Ohio River, Cincinnati, Ohio
Built
  • 1868–1872 (original)
  • 1896–1897 (replacement trusswork on same, but widened, piers)
Architect Becker, M.J.; et. al.
Architectural style Subdivided Pratt truss
NRHP reference No. 01000364
Added to NRHP April 17, 2001
History
Opened
  • April 1, 1872 (original bridge)
  • 1897 (present bridge, built on the original piers)
Purplepeople
Purple-clad people crossing the Newport Southbank Bridge
Rail Road bridge over the Ohio between Cincinnati and Newport, by Charles Waldack
Stereoscopic image of the bridge before its 1897 reconstruction.

The Newport Southbank Bridge, popularly known as the Purple People Bridge, stretches 2,670 feet over the Ohio River, connecting Newport, Kentucky to downtown Cincinnati, Ohio.

History

The original bridge first opened on April 1, 1872, under the name Newport and Cincinnati Bridge, and was Cincinnati's first railroad bridge spanning the Ohio River. The bridge piers were built with stone from Adams County, Ohio. The present bridge, which was built on the original piers (which were widened during that work), opened in 1897 to streetcar, pedestrian and automobile traffic.

In 1904, the bridge was renamed the L&N (Louisville and Nashville) Railroad Bridge, and this name remained until the bridge was rehabilitated and re-opened as a pedestrian-only bridge in May 2003.

The bridge was closed to railroad traffic in 1987, and later closed to automobile traffic in October 2001 after years of neglect and deterioration.

On April 17, 2001, the L&N Railroad Bridge was listed on the National Register of Historic Places.

In late 2001, the city of Newport, Kentucky, and Southbank Partners, an economic development group, used $4 million in state funds to restore the bridge. When it was time to decide on what color to paint it, a variety of options were explored. Computer-generated images of the bridge were shown to participants in more than a dozen focus groups, all of whom picked the color purple as a top choice. It was soon coined the "Purple People Bridge" by area residents.

The bridge provides convenient access to the "Newport on the Levee" development in Newport, Kentucky, as well as Downtown Cincinnati.

In 2006, it became possible for the public to cross the bridge via its superstructure wearing appropriate safety gear. There are similar bridge climb experiences in Australia and New Zealand. Citing lack of funds and low attendance, the Purple People Bridge Climb closed on May 23, 2007.

The bridge remains open to pedestrian and bicycle traffic.

Gallery

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