I’ve been putting this off for years, but here it finally is: a guide to all the drawbridges of San Francisco, every last one of ‘em, so it’s unabridged. And OK, this is not Amsterdam, so there are only four. But still….
ISLAIS CREEK BRIDGES
Our youngest bridge is the Illinois Street Bridge over the Islais Creek Channel, completed in 2006 and primarily serving to provide a railroad/heavy truck route to Piers 90-96. To get to this one just head east on Cesar Chavez, which in our hearts is really still Army Street even though they renamed it back in 1995 and we do love Cesar.
Keep going until you are way the hell over near our east coast, cross Third Street, turn right at the next corner, and you’re on Illinois Street. The bridge is two blocks ahead of you. Just before you get onto the bridge, you can go right into a little parking lot and then, if you’re on your Segway, bump carefully along a vertiginous and highly irregular dirt trail to the channel edge and then, with even more care owing to the dropoff into the drink, follow the narrow path along the brink three-quarters the way to Third Street, where you can look back and get this photo of the bridge, almost outshone by that spectacular artwork on the side of an abandoned grain silo (titled “Bay Rise” and by Laura Haddad and Tom Drugan).
Here it is shot from the Levon Hagop Nishkian Bridge.
Well no, the bridge doesn’t look like much since there’s no great tower of counterweights for drama. Still, it boasts bike/pedestrian lanes and two 11 ft wide traffic lanes with a shared centerline railroad track. The bridge has an 85 ft long bascule or “leaf” that provides a 65 ft wide navigable channel for boat traffic. Bascule bridges typically use a counterweight to help lift the leaf, but this bridge uses a non-counterweighted lift assembly operated by hydraulic cylinders that provide 600 tons of pulling force to raise the leaf 84 degrees. With 600 tons of pull, you don’t need no steenkeng counterweight.
The trunnion on which it pivots is at the base of the black vertical structure. I’d love to see this thing in operation, but one clue that the bridge opens very rarely is that they demand 72 hours notice if you want it opened. Hmmmm, to get some photos i may have to rent a boat with a tall mast…or better yet, get the maintenance schedule from the kindly Port Authority and lie in wait for the opening. Stay tuned…but don’t hold your breath. Click here for a superb animation of the construction of the bridge, provided by Creegan and D’Angelo, the engineers who built it. Here’s a shot of what you can see of the mechanism, which is damn little. What i need is my own personal drone that will lift me twenty feet into the air so i can get better pics of this sort of thing. Hmmm, if i did that i could just ditch the Segway and use the drone as a handicap transportation device. Naw, i’d probably get shot down…by one side or the other.
Here are some interesting construction photos taken by a team of UC Berkeley engineering students.
Second, the Third Street Bridge over the Islais Creek Channel. Dating from 1945, it’s a double bascule bridge just a block west of the Illinois Street Bridge and is nearly as unimpressive although at least it has an interesting Deco tender tower (as opposed to the innocuous little tin shack at the Illinois Street Bridge) and Deco covers over the rack mechanisms that extend ten feet above the bridge deck at the ends, where the two bascules pivot. Its proper name is the Levon Hagop Nishkian Bridge, which gets a little complicated since the bridge was designed and built by Leon Hagop Nishkian and i’d assumed “Levon” was a typo until further research revealed that he named it after his grandson, Levon. Leon, was a major figure in early twentieth-century engineering in the Bay Area, and is perhaps best known as the engineer behind the Castro Theater. But i digress.
Here it is, shot from the Illinois Street Bridge.
Here’s a view from the south end showing one of the rack covers. The Segway is in there for scale.
A closeup of the tender tower from the north bank pathway.
And finally, from the west.
MISSION CREEK BRIDGES
First, the 1932 Pratt through truss variant single-leaf Strauss trunnion bascule bridge on Third Street, gasp, now known more simply as the Lefty O’Doul Bridge. Well, yes, the engineer was Joseph Strauss, better known for the far lovelier Golden Gate Bridge although we now know that he got way too much credit for that one since he did not do the design for the bridge that was built and his proposed design was described by a contemporary critic as looking like “an upside-down rat trap”.
My Dutch friend Rina is from Amsterdam, where there are literally hundreds of handsome drawbridges in various styles going back centuries. She’s fluent in English, but she was grasping around desperately trying to find a word to describe the Lefty O’Doul bridge until i finally took pity on her and suggested, “ugly?” and she giggled. Ummm, maybe a rightside-up rat trap. Ain’t nobody never called this thing beautiful, but oh my goodness, what magnificent brute force!
Furthermore, as best i can determine, the original design of this bridge has not been tampered with, so what you see is totally real – a fine drawbridge in the same perfect working order as when it was built. When i was digging for data, i found this discussion of the bridge. Damn shame i could find nothing near as good on the other three.
Here it is from the west.
A shot into its mouth.
From the east.
Another from the east.
And the obligatory shot of the counterweights.
Oh, and here’s a link to a videoclip of it opening.
And finally, our oldest bridge, the 1916 Warren truss bascule bridge on Fourth Street, also by Joseph Strauss and properly titled the Peter R. Maloney Bridge. It enjoys what has got to be the largest counterweight on the planet (48 x 22 x 12 feet), so my first pic of this one is from the butt end.
The counterweight from high in the UCSF building, where i breached security and got a photograph from a window.
Once you start savoring that counterweight, though, you learn that it’s a fiberglass fake meticulously designed at a cost of $400,000 to imitate the look of the original. Well, see, since the bridge is a historic landmark, when it was rebuilt it had to look exactly like the original, but since strengthening the span significantly increased its weight, the cheapest engineering solution was to use a new hidden counterweight below the bridge while replacing the original counterweight with a fake.
That $400,000 was only a pittance because by the time the rebuild was complete in 2007, it had taken twice the money and thrice the time originally set. Click here for the full story. It’s worse than you imagined, but yes, i still love the bridge.
Here it is from the east.
A shot into its mouth.
And a shot of the works.
CODA
Look, i love bridges, and i especially love drawbridges, but i can’t help noticing that the two over Islais Creek do not seem to meet any current need since there is no longer anything on the creek channel west of the bridges for vessels to serve other than a pitiful little new landing too small for anything but pedestrians that i cannot imagine any sailboat actually using since, except for a pocket-size plaza, there’s no there there once you’ve climbed the ramp from the landing. In the entire inner channel there are no houseboats, no businesses with docks, no nothing. Here’s what’s left of the north pier.
The south pier is in worse shape.
And yes, the two drawbridges over Mission Creek are clearly necessary because without them the sailboats moored at the houseboats in the interior part of the creek would not be able to enter and depart. The problem, alas, is that the city spent nearly $40 million on the 2007 restoration of the Maloney Bridge to serve the boats belonging to the inhabitants of twenty houseboats. Some folks might argue that we could have come out for half price by giving ‘em a million bucks apiece to berth their sailboats elsewhere rather than maintaining two drawbridges to serve them. As it is, the owners of those houseboats are getting a sweet deal at city expense. And that said, i do like the idea of having some resident houseboats. Adds color.
Perhaps the bottom line is that all four drawbridges serve splendidly as civic art, and i think that should be publicly funded, like “Ship Shape Shifting Time” by Nobuho Nagasawa on the Islais Creek Promenade just west of the Levon Hagop Nishkian Bridge.
I welcome comments on this post and especially hope that readers who spot an error will call it to my attention so i can correct it. I’ve noticed in my superficial research on these bridges that there sure is a lot of contradictory information about them on the Internet, so i had to make ill educated guesses about who was right. And finally, i’ll have a followup post if i ever get photos of the bridges with their bascules raised. This will be far more likely for the Mission Creek bridges since a tender told me that they are opened a couple of times on nice sailing days, while the Islais Creek bridges are now opened only for maintenance.
10 Comments
Fantastic pictures. The contrast of historic drawbridge landmarks with freeways are sights I have never had a view of., and I do enjoy. Thanks for the links.
Glad you liked the pics and the links. Yeah, sure, everyone can DuckDuckGo, but when i find an informative article, i like to link to it to help my readers.
These was wonderful. Thank you for the write ups. Your efforts are appreciated.
Apologies for the long delay in approval. Glad you liked the essay.
You wrote: “the two drawbridges over Mission Creek are clearly necessary because without them the sailboats moored at the houseboats in the interior part of the creek would not be able to enter and depart. The problem, alas, is that the city spent nearly $40 million on the 2007 restoration of the Maloney Bridge to serve the boats belonging to the inhabitants of twenty houseboats…the owners of those houseboats are getting a sweet deal at city expense.”
Ironically, it was the construction of these two drawbridges that cut off Mission Bay from the S.F. Bay in the first place. So it’s the least the City could do to preserve what little waterway is left for boats. “Mission Bay was an estuary, combining freshwater marsh, saltwater marsh, tidal mudflats, and shallow bay. All that’s left today of the original Mission Bay is the Mission Creek channel, extending from San Francisco Bay past the stadium to under the freeways near 7th and Berry Streets.” (see http://www.foundsf.org/index.php?title=Natural_History_of_Mission_Bay or Chapter 18 of “Vanished Waters: A History of San Francisco’s Mission Bay” by the Mission Creek Conservancy.
p.s. I do enjoy your blogs–Is there some way to subscribe? You might also enjoy my boyfriend’s watercolor versions of the 4th Street Bridge and the Mission Creek houseboats spanned by the freeway (see aaron-eminger.pixels.com).
I just love it when knowledgeable people make comments that provide germane information to supplement my incomplete posts. Oh, and I just recently read that there are plans to plant a couple of buildings on Islais Creek. I’m hoping at least one of them will have a dock so that the two drawbridges there will actually again have a purpose.
The Lefty O’Doul Bridge was prominently featured in a sequence of scenes in the 1985 James Bond 007 movie, A View to a Kill, when 007 instructs his accomplice to drive cross the bridge in a ladder fire truck despite the fact that the bridge is in the process of being raised.
Apologies for taking so long to approve your excellent addition to the essay. Many thanks.
You cleared up a major question I had when looking at the counterweight on the 4th St bridge. It looked as if those skimpy rods from the counterweight down to the pivoting mechanism were WAY too weak to hold such an enormous weight, especially in compression! Fake fiberglass counterweights, as you pointed out, was the answer. I was completely baffled for days thinking how those rods could possible work. Thanks for clearing the problem up for me.
This is months too late, but I just noticed that even thought I’d approved your comment, I’d neglected to reply to it, thanking you for your feedback. I just love answering folks’ questions and making the site useful. Many thanks.