Photographer’s Note
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A covered bridge is a bridge, often single-lane, with enclosed sides and a roof. They have typically been wooden, although some newer ones are concrete or metal with glass sides. Especially associated with the nineteenth century, covered bridges often serve as prominent local landmarks and have long attracted the attention of historic preservationists.
Construction details
Early bridges were often made of wood, especially where it was a plentiful resource. Wooden bridges tended to deteriorate rapidly from exposure to the elements, having a useful lifespan of only nine years. Covering them protected their structural members, thus extending their life to 80 years or more. Covered bridges were also constructed to be used by travelers during storms and inclement weather.
Most wooden covered bridges employ trusses as their key structural design element. A popular design was the Brown truss, known for its simplicity, but others were also used.
Given the ready availability of steel, concrete, and other modern construction materials, most modern covered bridges are built either for the convenience of the user, rather than to protect the structure itself, or as a statement of style or design.
Covered bridges in Europe
The Western tradition of covered bridges originated in Central Europe.
Surviving or reconstructed European covered bridges include:
Ponte Coperto over the Ticino river, Pavia, Italy , built 1354 (picture)
Bridge over the Rhine river from Bad Säckingen, Germany, to Stein, Switzerland
Bridge over the Muota river, Brunnen, near Lake Lucerne Switzerland (picture)
Bridge over the Saane/Sarine river, near Fribourg, Switzerland (picture)
Kapellbrücke, near Lucerne, Switzerland — 650-foot (200 m) long, originally built 1333; destroyed by fire 1993 and rebuilt
Irgandı, in Osmangazi, Turkey 1367
The Covered Bridge in Lovech, Bulgaria — built 1874
Logic Lane covered bridge in Oxford, England — built 1904
Pont de Rohan over The Elorn River in Landerneau, Brittany, France. built 16th 17th century.
Famous stone covered bridges include the Rialto Bridge in Venice, Italy which for long was one of only three over the Grand Canal and a popular tourist attraction.
The Bridges of Sighs in Venice, Cambridge and Oxford are also covered bridges.
Covered bridges in North America
Oregon has the largest number of historical covered bridges in the western United States.[1] They are also common in places such as Elizabethton, Tennessee, Lane County, Oregon, Madison County, Iowa, Parke County, Indiana, and Blount County, Alabama. Parts of California, Indiana, Ohio, Michigan, Kentucky, Maryland, Minnesota, Virginia, West Virginia and the New England states also have surviving covered bridges.
There are various structural designs used for covered bridges, such as the Burr Truss.
Opened on July 4, 1901, the 1,282 foot (390 m) Hartland Bridge, crossing the Saint John River at Hartland, New Brunswick, is currently the longest covered bridge in the world. It is a national historic site. In 1900, New Brunswick had an estimated 400 covered bridges, and Quebec more than 1000, while Ontario had only 5. As of 2006, there were 94 covered bridges still standing in Quebec, 65 in New Brunswick and at least two in Ontario.
A much longer covered bridge (5,960 ft) between Columbia and Wrightsville, Pennsylvania once spanned the mile-wide Susquehanna River, making it the longest and most versatile covered bridge in the world during its existence. It featured railroad tracks, a towpath for canal boats crossing the river between two canals on either bank, and a carriage / wagon / pedestrian road. The popular toll bridge was burned June 28, 1863, by Union militia during the American Civil War to prevent its usage by the Confederate Army of Northern Virginia during the Gettysburg Campaign. A replacement wooden covered bridge was destroyed by a windstorm a few years later. It was rebuilt as an open-air steel bridge.
As of 2008, the longest existing covered bridge in the United States is the Smolen-Gulf Bridge spanning the Ashtabula River near Ashtabula. The town of Blenheim, New York has the longest single-span covered bridge in the world (232 ft), built in 1855. The bridge crosses the Schoharie Creek in the northern Catskills. It is one of only six "double-barreled" covered bridges still in existence in North America; that is, a bridge with two traffic lanes separated by a supporting truss. Other double-barreled examples exist in Vermont (2), Ohio (1), Indiana (1), and West Virginia (1).
Covered bridges are generally considered old-fashioned, and appeal to tourists, but the purpose is twofold: (1) covered bridges appear similar to barns and it is easier to transport cattle across them without startling them, and (2) to build a structure for weather protection over the working part of the bridge. A bridge built entirely out of wood, without any protective coating, may last 10 to 15 years. Builders discovered that if the bridge's underpinnings were protected with a roof, the bridge could stand for 70, or even 80 years. The existing covered bridges have been renovated using concrete footings and steel trusses to hold additional weight and to replace the original support timbers. Some covered bridges, such as the one in Newton Falls, Ohio and Elizabethton, Tennessee, also feature an integrated covered walkway.
Covered bridges in Asia
In Asia, covered bridges are most prevalent in China, where they are called lángqiáo (廊桥). There are many covered bridges, called "wind and rain bridges" in the Chinese province of Guizhou. These were traditionally built by the Dong minority people. There are also many covered bridges in the Fujian province of southern China.[1]
Taishun County, in southern Zhejiang province near the border of Fujian, has more than 900 covered bridges, many of them hundreds of years old, as well as a covered bridge museum.[2] [3] There are also a number in nearby Qingyuan County, as well as in Shouning County, in northern Fujian province.
There is a well known covered bridge in Hoi An, Vietnam (in the Quang Nam Province of Vietnam's South Central Coast), called Chùa Cầu—the Japanese Bridge (illustrated in Gallery, below).
Modern covered bridges
employing the Burr Truss
Modern covered bridges are usually for pedestrians, for example to walk from one part of an office building to another part, to cross railway tracks at a station, or in a shopping center on an elevated level, crossing a road. See also skyway.
Glass-walled covered bridges are rather common at American airports, and some of those bridges can be found at John F. Kennedy Airport in New York City.
Also, some highway bridges, such as the George Washington Bridge, have lower decks for additional capacity, and those decks, while generally open on the sides, can be enclosed with plastic from time to time during construction, thus rendering the lower decks as partially covered bridges.
Covered bridges in fiction
North American covered bridges received much recognition as a result of the success of the novel, The Bridges of Madison County written by Robert James Waller and made into a Hollywood motion picture starring Meryl Streep and Clint Eastwood.
The fictional rural town portrayed in the 1988 film Beetlejuice features a covered bridge. It provides the early scene in which the protagonists (played by Alec Baldwin and Geena Davis) are killed when their car crashes through the wall of the bridge and plunges into the river below.
A covered bridge is featured in the 1999 film Sleepy Hollow, in a suspense-filled scene depicting an encounter between main character Ichabod Crane (played by Johnny Depp) and the main villain, The Headless Horseman (played by Christopher Walken).
A covered bridge is used for comic effect in the Jay Cronley novel (and Chevy Chase movie,) "Funny Farm," when a fully loaded delivery truck attempts to cross a rickety covered bridge.
In the early 20th century, covered bridges were sometimes nicknamed "kissing bridges", as the cover allowed seclusion for couples to kiss each other.
Critiques | Translate
Wandering_Dan
(3265) 2009-01-17 18:09
Hi, Tom -
Well, why not?
Beautifully rendered colors here. I would have sworn the bridge deck was tilted, but I copied it over to Photoshop and checked with a guide line, and it's perfectly level. Must be an optical illusion because of the slanted shadow.
I disagree with Wikipedia on calling the GW Bridge an example of a "partially covered bridge." There is no such thing, and in any case the use of temporary construction materials does not define the structure. This is one example of why I never like using Wikipedia, and why I do not mark notes that consist entirely of Wikipedia entries as useful. Sorry, but but they are not reliable - or, at least, there is insufficient guarantee of their reliability. Most history professors, for example, will not accept a Wiki citation. (Though I do have to concede that this article reads better than some, with the exception I mentioned above.)
Best,
Dan
batalay
(21086) 2009-01-17 18:28
Hello Tom,
Your informal theme of covered bridges is among my favorite shots that you've been sharing with us. I just logged onto TE for a few minutes, and was rewarded by a new post from you. The vibrant colors, composition and resolution are all flawless. The note, as usual, is detailed and surpassing.
Warm regards,
Bulent
AROBN54
(10789) 2009-01-17 18:44
Beautiful, brilliant color, Tom, and the light is wonderful. Perfect sharpness and contrast, excellent composition with the bridge off centered and great perspective. I love the marvelous clear color cold winter temps produce. Beautiful! Many thanks and warm regards,
Shelly
Dyerco
(9180) 2009-01-17 18:47
Hi Tom
This image is real eye candy as the reds and blues compliment each other so well. I also think that the snow helps simplify the surroundings. The write up is great.
Phil
vmf-214
(1624) 2009-01-17 18:53
Hi Tom,
The red and white bridge rally stand out against the blue sky. Excellent shot looking inside the bridge and colors and sharpness are perfect. Excellent note you posted Tom. Have a great evening.
Regards
Jason.
macondo
(13193) 2009-01-17 20:14
Hi Tom.
Can't answer your question, and I doubt if there is an answer that would explain all of them.
But they make a good photo op if they are brightly red, surrounded by snow, and topped by a brilliant blue sky. A well chosen spot to take this one, revealing the light at the other end and placing the whole to one side of the centre. Sharp and clear, a very good exposure.
Regards,
Andrew
maltese
(21537) 2009-01-17 23:32
Hello Tom
De superbes couleurs entre le rouge du pont et le ciel bien polarisé. une bonne composition qui invite à traverser ce pont!!
Une belle photo sur ce style de pont dont j'ai vu quelques exemplaires au Québec.
Beau travail
Amicalement
Hervé
rodgerg
(24559) 2009-01-18 0:35
Hello Tom,
Covered bridge, very interesting note and very intersting picture. Thanks.
Very nice view too with beautiful colours (especially the red of the covered bridge) and contrast well collected. The POV well selected give a great propsect effect. Good photowork.
Have a good sunday,
Roger
snunney
(35150) 2009-01-18 1:34
Hello Tom,
A good perspective on this bridge, with the line of lights taking the viewer gently to the other side. The rich red tones of the timber make a fine contrast with the lovely blue sky.
pauloog
(6701) 2009-01-18 1:41
Hello Tom,
These covered bridges are a fascinating piece of road architecture. I could admire myself some of them this fall in New Hampshiore and will probably post some photos during the next weeks. Your bright photo, with the red contrastign with the snow and the deep blue sky captures very well their charm and identity.
Thanks for the very good note too.
Regards,
Paul
Royaldevon
(5938) 2009-01-18 1:56
My word, Tom, what a set of notes!
Fine pov, inviting the viewer to enter the bridge and proceed across! The focus is sharp and the composition well constructed.
As always, the colour of these bridges is very eye catching.
Kind regards,
Bev :-)
fulvio52
(8314) 2009-01-18 2:57
Lovely shot, Tom. Great red, white & blue display, striking frontal impact, simple and very effective.
It reminds me a lot of the Shimanek Bridge (dating 1927, Scio, OR.) which I had the pleasure to visit in September 1997 with my buddy Jeff Shimanek, from San Diego, CA. One of his ancestors was either the architect or big time involved in its construction anyhow, I can't exactly remember right now. Have a good day, y'all. See ya soon,
Fulvio.
PixelTerror
(86438) 2009-01-18 3:01
HI Tom,
Whatever their reason to be they are now a unique heritage feature of your corner of the world, good position to deliver the perspective through the bridge and brilliant highlights, the colors combination blue white red works very well.
Have a nice day JY
feather
(49872) 2009-01-18 3:23
You should put your covered bridges into a theme and have them all together. :) I like the way you have composed this one looking right through the bridge to the other side. The perspective both from the road and from the interior lights draws the eye right in. The light is good, enhancing the strong red against the white snow and blue sky.
Kath
baba_flies
(8035) 2009-01-18 3:48
Hello Tom! What a great series! I showed your last upload of a covered bridge to someone I email sometimes but that I have never met. He worked with Benno many years ago and is meanwhile a part time photographer with KeyStone Press. He is proud to be on their salary list which is not easy I guess. We email sometimes talking about photography and he will take me out for a photo safari this year hopefully.
He would love to send you a picture of a covered bridge "Swiss style". Shall I workshop it once he has sent it to me or would you leave me your email address? What a world, TE is amazing. He is also working on a new project making a book about Swiss (or European) bridges ... I told him that I will carry around his tripod just to see this all :))) But maybe he has an assistant alreday. All so funny!
Another treasure, one after the other a true treat! Kath is so right, you should make a theme so we have them in one category and can always refer to it. Enjoy your Sunday ... Barbara.
asajernigan
(14236) 2009-01-18 6:19
Tom,
This is a great shot of this beautiful covered bridge. The bright red bridge provides excellent contrast against the deep blue sky. The road leads the eye through the bridge giving the shot an excellent sense of direction. The lighting and colors are great with excellent sharpness and detail. Your note is very informative and interesting!
TFS,
Asa
Floydian
(30970) 2009-01-18 6:32
Hi Tom,
A very long note and i found already those bridges here in Europe, but to me it are the bridges you have over there which are for me the best examples in how such a bridge should look like. I have seen some before here in Swiss, but maybe it's also the colour of your bridges that i like more. Maybe one day when i visit the eastcoast i will try to find some and when light suits me well trying to make a decent shot of them.
Meanwhile this red beauty looks very nice and exactly what i have in mind how they must look like ;-)
Regards,
Henk
jplebrun
(17172) 2009-01-18 18:44
Hi Tom
superbe ce cliché de ce pont couvert rouge dans ce ciel tout bleu.
Amitiés
Jean-Pierre
trekks
(14324) 2009-01-19 1:19
hi Tom
After seeing your covered bridge, now I suddenly remember the one I passed through in New Brunswick/Canada, it is called Hartford town, with the metal plates as bridge deck.
I like the arch and bright color of this end view to contrast against the blue sky. Good composed scene.
tfs, bill
Longroute
(9605) 2009-01-19 3:30
Hey Tom, what a note you wrote!
It seems you made an historical research on covered bridges!
Well, I had thought they were covered mainly to protect passers from snow and rain. I imagine they can be very slippery with ice... Now one question from me: why red? So that you could take a smart picture? (:- I've seen several European wooden covered bridges but they were all natural colour... Anyway surely the cromatic contrast between red and intense blue is always appealing and that name written above with the "25 dollars fine..." is so cute!
Best greetings,
Donato
saylan-cb
(12726) 2009-01-19 4:25
Hi Tom,
Very nice compositions and good POV with excellent sharpness and detail.Your note is very informative and interesting!
TFS/Regards,
Şaylan
evanrizo
(456) 2009-01-27 11:40
Congratulation my friend I think you make the greatest presentations of your region and its impressive sightseeings. Especial these bridges and the lighthouses.
Thanks for it and the notice is very interesting.
Evangelos
maloutim
(3991) 2009-02-01 23:03
Hi Tom?
Do you know "Silvio1953", from Italy? He is a great guy! Yesterday, I was asking him how many times he had posted "the great oak of Nottoria" near where he lives. He photogaphs his environment and shares it with us so often that we think we must know it nearly as much as he does!
Well, I think it's practically the same with your environment, especially the covered bridges of your area and most of all this Buskirk bridge, which you have shown us on every angle, in every season, for our best pleasure!
This is a great winter view with such a clear blue sky, on which the red colour stands out so well!
As for the note about covered bridges, it's extremely interesting.
I started group themes "bridges (covered) in Europe and in the world",last year. I haven't done much to it lately, but I hope to get them furnished little by little. TFS.
Best regards.
MarieLouise.
Photo Information
-
Copyright: Tom O'Donnell (gunbud)
(28029) - Genre: Lieux
- Medium: Couleur
- Date Taken: 2009-01-09
- Categories: Vie quotidienne, Transports, Architecture
- Camera: Olympus E-300/ E-Volt, 52 mm Circ. Polarizer
- Versions: version originale
- Date Submitted: 2009-01-17 17:53
Discussions
- A maloutim: Covered Bridges (1)
by gunbud, last updated 02-02 19:42 - A baba_flies: Covered bridges (1)
by gunbud, last updated 01-18 20:34








