Junction Bridge
The Junction Bridge is an old railway bridge spanning the Arkansas River between North Little Rock and Little Rock, Arkansas. The bridge is currently being converted for pedestrian and bicycle use as part of the Arkansas River Trail. It will connect the popular River Market with Argenta, ALLTEL Arena, and Dickey-Stephens Park. North Little Rock is paying $225,000 for their share of the project. Little Rock has allocated $447,000. A matching grant of $1.6 million from the Arkansas Highway and Transportation Department, federal grant money, and Pulaski County will pay the rest of the $5.8 million project. The engineering assessment of the bridge, which included underwater study, was done by McClelland Engineering.
The Junction Bridge Collaborative, composed of county board officials and local citizens, is currently exploring the idea of turning the structure into a "inhabited bridge" complete with attached restaurant, hotel, or office building. The collaborative is exploring the option of pulling a number of stainless steel rail cars onto the bridge as covered restaurant spaces.
The Little Rock Junction Railway Company formed on December 8, 1883, to create a connecting link between the Little Rock, Mississippi River, and Texas Railway and the Little Rock and Fort Smith Railway. Plans called for the bridge foundation to cover much of La Petite Roche, namesake of the city. The Junction Bridge was constructed by the Missouri Pacific Railroad in 1884. Soundings for the first pier were made on February 4, 1884, by construction engineer L.D. McGlashan. The bridge opened to locomotives on December 8, 1884. The railroad line soon fell into the hands of the Union Pacific Railroad. Traffic over the bridge ceased in 1984. The Union Pacific Railroad gave the bridge to the City of Little Rock on December 28, 2001.
References
- Alan Leveritt, "Creating a Landmark: The Work to Make an Abandoned Bridge a Symbol," Arkansas Times'.
- "Our Town: Little Rock Notebook," Arkansas Democrat-Gazette, January 1, 2008.