Published August 20, 2008 07:46 pm - Ashtabula County’s newest covered bridge, and the nation’s longest, will be dedicated 2:30 p.m. Tuesday
Nation’s longest covered bridge to be dedicated
Ashtabula County’s 17th is 613 feet long and cost $8 million
By CARL E. FEATHER - Lifestyle Editor - cfeather@starbeacon.com
Star Beacon
Ashtabula County’s newest covered bridge, and the nation’s longest, will be dedicated 2:30 p.m. Tuesday, Aug. 26.
The ceremony will be held at the southeast end of the bridge, with access off Plymouth Ridge Road. The Covered Bridge Festival Committee is holding the event, which is being underwritten by Lakeview Federal Credit Union.
A highlight of the event will be the official naming of the bridge, which spans the Ashtabula River on State Road. There is already a State Road covered bridge in the county.
The new bridge is 613 feet long and cost $8 million. It is No. 17 for Ashtabula County and the longest in the United States.
The bridge was designed by John Smolen, who was county engineer when the idea of bridging the Ashtabula River Gulf with a wooden structure was first conceived nearly a decade ago.
General contractor for the bridge is Union Industrial Contractors (UIC), which started work on it two years ago. As of Tuesday, only a small amount of siding on the southeast end remained to be installed; the contractor is waiting on a shipment of the material. UIC has until the end of the month to complete the bridge.
Betty Morrison, executive director of the Covered Bridge Festival Committee, says the dedication is scheduled to coincide with the presence of U.S. and state officials being in the county for the river cleanup celebration that morning. Gov. Ted Strickland will not attend because of his commitment to be at the Democratic National Convention in Denver.
The covered-bridge dedication is open to the public. Parking will be available on both sides of State Road and in the Indian Trails Park parking lot at the bottom of the bridge. Morrison says visitors need to be wear appropriate shoes; the access road and State Road approach have not been paved and could be muddy and rutted.
The ceremony will include music by the Lakeside High School Band, the school district that serves the Plymouth (south) side of the bridge. Plymouth will be further represented by township officials. Also in attendance will be Ashtabula Township officials.
Morrison will serve as master of ceremonies, and remarks and introductions will be made by Tim Martin, Ashtabula County engineer. The traditional ribbon cutting will be replaced with a log on which officials will take turns sawing, using a cross-cut saw.
“It will be a great photo opportunity,” Morrison says.
A procession from the north to the south end will follow the log cutting. Procession components will include a horse-drawn wagon, antique vehicles and the Lakeside Band.
The bridge and pedestrian walkway then will be opened for the general public to walk across. While the bridge will be officially opened at the event, the road leading to it will remain closed for a least another month. Martin says both State Road and the park access roads will be paved and guardrails installed before the road will be opened to traffic.
Bids for the paving work will be opened Friday.
“Once we do that and the contract is signed, I’m anticipating it will be done by the end of September,” he says.