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Phil- I looked at the Manyunk bridge very seriously as a possibility. I worked on Boathouse Row for several years, and I always loved that bridge. Unfortunately, it's just too tall. I've got staging tracks below, so the river can only be so far below the bridge. I suppose I could try to design a (vertically) shorter bridge using the same arch-on-arch look, but I'm not sure how it would work in my (linearly) limited space. For that design to fit, I think I'd have to figure out a way to expand the bridge so that the crossover is on it, and to hide the linkage to the switch machine. Not easy with such an airy structure.
That wasn't my most profound post, but at least it was more concise than is usual for me!
It was profound in its own way, and it reminded me of comments that you have made elsewhere about using visual clues to establish a prototype. I think a stone arch bridge better accomplishes that goal.
hmmm ... so, will we see GG1s on Tehachapie ...
The more I think about a bridge based on the Manayunk bridge, the more I keep winding up back at Dave V's post. If I'm not doing a lift bridge, I think it should be stone arch. Of course, there's always a design based on Rockville.http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rockville_BridgeAlthough that bridge would be 24 feet long in N Scale.
you WILL be installing superelevated curves. Right?!