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Bardwell's Ferry Bridge

1882 establishments in MassachusettsBridges completed in 1880Bridges in Franklin County, MassachusettsConway, MassachusettsHistoric American Engineering Record in Massachusetts
National Register of Historic Places in Franklin County, MassachusettsRoad bridges on the National Register of Historic Places in MassachusettsTruss bridges in the United StatesUse mdy dates from July 2022
Bardwell Ferry Bridge
Bardwell Ferry Bridge

The Bardwell's Ferry Bridge, built in 1882, is a historic lenticular truss bridge spanning the Deerfield River between the towns of Shelburne and Conway in Franklin County, Massachusetts. The bridge is listed on the National Register of Historic Places and is designated as a Massachusetts Historic Civil Engineering Landmark by the American Society of Civil Engineers.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Bardwell's Ferry Bridge (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Bardwell's Ferry Bridge
Bardwells Ferry Road,

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Wikipedia: Bardwell's Ferry BridgeContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 42.555555555556 ° E -72.678055555556 °
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Bardwells Ferry Road

Bardwells Ferry Road

Massachusetts, United States
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Bardwell Ferry Bridge
Bardwell Ferry Bridge
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Conway School of Landscape Design
Conway School of Landscape Design

The Conway School (Conway) is a graduate program for sustainable landscape design and planning. It was founded in 1972 in a rural 24.5-acre (99,000 m2) campus in Conway, Massachusetts, and in 2015 opened a new campus in a renovated mill in Easthampton, Massachusetts. In 2018, the school moved to a renovated historic Coach House building in the Village Hill neighborhood of Northampton, Massachusetts. The graduate school offers a unique Master of Science degree in Ecological Design. The school accepts about twenty students each year into its 10-month program. The mission of the Conway School is to explore, develop, practice, and teach design that is ecologically and socially sustainable. The program puts particular emphasis on communication skills and community building. Students work on real projects with real clients at varying scales, from residential landscaping to urban planning and management of entire watersheds and food system. The curriculum and projects are designed to provide graduates with the basic knowledge and skills necessary to practice the planning, design, and management of the land that respects nature as well as humanity; develop ecological awareness, understanding, respect, and accommodation in the school's students and project clients; and produce projects that fit human use to natural conditions. Conway's founder, landscape architect and planner Walter Cudnohofsky, served as director from 1972 to 1992. Donald Walker, alum of the class of 1978, was the director from 1992 to 2005. Landscape architect Paul Cawood Hellmund served as director from 2006 to 2015. In 2016, the school adopted a shared leadership model. Currently, alum and former board member Bruce Stedman '78 is executive director, Ken Byrne is academic director and alum Priscilla Novitt is administrative director.