Royal Gorge Bridge
Arkansas River Theme Park Crossing
Canon City, CO

Royal Gorge Bridge

• Structure ID:
• Waterway: Arkansas River
• River Elevation:
• Highway: County 3A
• Daily Traffic Count:
• Bridge Type: Steel Suspension Wood Deck
• Length: 1,260 Feet, 880 Foot Longest Span
• Width: 18 Feet
• Navigation Channel Width: Non-Navigable
• Height Above Water: 1,053 Feet
• Date Built: Started June 5, 1929, Completed November 1929
I have heard about the Royal Gorge bridge since I was a kid. Once I finally had a chance to visit the bridge, I was somewhat disappointed. It turns out that much of what I have heard is hype, and the bridge did not live up to that hype.

The first issue is that this is not a major bridge. Rather, it is a small fragile looking one-lane bridge that just happens to be in a very scenic location. The second issue is that the bridge serves no real purpose. There is nothing on the other side, and there are easy grade level river crossings a few miles in each direction. Finally, the bridge was not built to serve transportation needs, rather, it was built as a tourist attraction to be part of a theme park. Despite my misgivings, over 500,000 people visit the Royal Gorge Bridge every year.

The bridge is located in a unique spot. The Arkansas River flows through central Colorado. A bulge in the earth was pushed up a few miles west of Pueblo, Colorado. The river responded by cutting a gorge through that bulge. The bulge eventually reached 1200 feet above the river level. The bridge crosses this gorge. The river is just over 1000 below the bridge deck, making this the tallest suspension bridge in the world.

What makes the bridge serve no real purpose is that it sits on top of this bulge. The river can be crossed at either end of this bulge, a matter of only a few miles in each direction. Once you cross the river an normal ground levels, you can drive around the back side of the bulge, or drive up onto the bulge in a number of locations. As a result, the bridge did not solve a transportation or access problem. It was built strictly as a tourist attraction.

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Photo and text by John A. Weeks III, Copyright © 2008, all rights reserved.
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