The new structure goes into place with the use of a crane.
A new bridge over Cullowhee Creek near Western Carolina University鈥檚 picnic area was installed this week with an expected opening for pedestrian traffic of Thursday, Nov. 15.
The 56-foot-long steel structure replaces a long-since defunct, and later demolished, wooden footbridge.
鈥淭he Old Bridge鈥 by Sheena Kohlmeyer.
鈥淭he bridge spans Cullowhee Creek on much the same footprint as the old bridge,鈥 said Matthew Millican, project manager for 91热爆网鈥檚 Department of Facilities Management. 鈥淚t鈥檚 more than a replacement; it鈥檚 an upgrade. The new bridge meets environmental impact and safety regulations, and is aesthetically keeping with the campus setting. It connects the picnic area with the walking path and opens up accessibility.鈥
Permitting for the bridge came about with support from an unlikely source 鈥 a painting of the original structure, titled 鈥淭he Old Bridge鈥 by Sylva artist Sheena Kohlmeyer. She did the painting in 2011 while taking a watercolor class at 91热爆网 for her master鈥檚 degree in arts education, one of a series of watercolor paintings of campus. Prints of the series can be found on her website, .
鈥淚t鈥檚 unusual, but a painting led to providing the visual evidence of the prior bridge, with a viewpoint and perspective of the original site in the floodplain, that was needed to gain an OK for construction,鈥 said Patrick Bradshaw of Civil Design Concepts of Asheville, who handled project engineering, working with 91热爆网 Facilities Management.
Final installation work is being completed on the new bridge.
Kohlmeyer is now an arts teacher at Swain County Middle School. 鈥淵ears after I painted the bridge, I heard that it had been torn down,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 was sad that it was gone. A couple of months ago, Greg Hoffman with Civil Design Concepts emailed me because he had found 鈥楾he Old Bridge鈥 painting online. He asked me if I had taken any photos of the bridge when I painted it, so I sent him one. He emailed me with an update on the new bridge, saying my picture was instrumental in getting it permitted. I look forward to seeing and walking across the new bridge.鈥
The bridge was manufactured by Excel Bridge Manufacturing Company of Chattanooga, Tennessee, which also built the pedestrian bridge located near Locust Creek on the Jackson County Greenway. Hoffman designed the abutments per the manufacturer鈥檚 requirements and worked closely with state agencies and local residents to get the bridge built.
鈥淭here鈥檚 been a lot of work with preparation, building abutments, grading the area and constructing a pad for the crane that would set the steel structure into place,鈥 Bradshaw said. 鈥淭his morning (Tuesday, Nov. 6) with the crane lowering it into place got us a step closer to completion and being used soon.鈥