M Street Bridge (Washington, D.C.)
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The M Street Bridge, also known as the M Street Overpass, carries M Street across
Rock Creek Rock Creek or Rockcreek may refer to: Streams United States * Rock Creek (California) * Rock Creek (Fountain Creek tributary), Colorado * Rock Creek (Idaho) * Rock Creek (Kankakee River tributary), Illinois * Rock Creek (Wapsipinicon River tribut ...
and the Rock Creek and Potomac Parkway. It lies between the neighborhoods of Georgetown and Foggy Bottom in
Northwest The points of the compass are a set of horizontal, radially arrayed compass directions (or azimuths) used in navigation and cartography. A compass rose is primarily composed of four cardinal directions—north, east, south, and west—each sep ...
Washington, D.C. The non-arched design of the bridge contrasts with that of all the other bridges rising over the parkway.Davis, Timothy (1992).
History and Description
pp. 12, 89, 91


History

The original wooden bridge at the site was the first bridge in the current District of Columbia, being constructed in 1788 by the City of Georgetown two years before it was incorporated into the District. The bridge reportedly collapsed during a severe storm, leading to a legend that the ghosts of a stagecoach driver and his horses that drowned in the collapse could be seen thereafter, still attempting to cross the bridge. It was replaced by a heavy wooden drawbridge in 1800, as Rock Creek was at that time wide and deep enough that sailing ships needed to transit the bridge, although the creek became unnavigable by the 1830s due to silt from upstream construction and agricultural uses, as well as construction of a quay obstructing the mouth of the creek. A covered wooden bridge replaced the drawbridge in 1839, followed by a steel-truss bridge in 1871, which was closed in 1925 because it had become structurally unsound. Remnants of the western abutment of the 1871 bridge still exist adjacent to that of the current bridge.


Design

The current bridge was originally contemplated as a steel-girder bridge for reasons of cost and the belief that an arch bridge could not be built large enough to accommodate the parkway, then in planning, running underneath it. The bridge was one of the few to be designed solely by the office of the District of Columbia Engineer of Bridges without input from an outside private firm. The United States Commission of Fine Arts (CFA), the agency tasked with reviewing architectural projects in the capital, under Charles Moore opposed the design because it did not conform with the other park bridges, which were designed to harmonize with their surroundings. The designers attempted to compromise by encasing the bridge in concrete and adding ornamentation, but Moore was not appeased, calling the new design "a brutal bridge, entirely inconsistent with any other parkway treatment," and stating that "the design is fundamentally bad. A bridge constructed along such lines would be a perpetual eyesore." Moore also objected that adding ornamentation would not satisfy the fundamental design principles perceived to be lacking in the bridge. The D.C. Board of Commissioners decided to go ahead with the design despite the formal disapproval of the CFA, since the legislation authorizing the bridge specified a steel-girder design, and only mandated consultation with the CFA but did not require that their recommendations be followed. This situation led to the passage of the
Shipstead-Luce Act The Shipstead-Luce Act (, codified at ), is an American statute which extended the authority of the United States Commission of Fine Arts (CFA) as a statutory independent agency within the United States federal government and allowed it to regula ...
in 1930, which gave the commission legal authority to enforce their decisions. The bridge was constructed in 1929 and 1930.


See also

*
List of bridges documented by the Historic American Engineering Record in Washington, D.C. This is a list of bridges documented by the Historic American Engineering Record in Washington, D.C. Bridges References {{HAER list, structure=bridge *List *List Washington, D.C. Bridges Bridges A bridge is a structure built to Spa ...


References

{{coord, 38, 54, 19, N, 77, 03, 20, W, name=M Street Bridge, type:landmark_region:US-DC, display=title Bridges over Rock Creek (Potomac River tributary) Bridges completed in 1930 Foggy Bottom Georgetown (Washington, D.C.) Historic American Engineering Record in Washington, D.C. Road bridges in Washington, D.C. Steel bridges in the United States