place

Lake Street Bridge (Chicago)

Bascule bridges in the United StatesBridges in ChicagoChicago stubsIllinois bridge (structure) stubsRailroad bridges in Illinois
Road bridges in IllinoisTruss bridges in the United States
Pink Line Crosses the Chicago River (4904402419)
Pink Line Crosses the Chicago River (4904402419)

The Lake Street Bridge is a bridge that spans the Chicago River in downtown Chicago, Illinois, United States.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Lake Street Bridge (Chicago) (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Lake Street Bridge (Chicago)
West Lake Street, Chicago Loop

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address External links Nearby Places
placeShow on map

Wikipedia: Lake Street Bridge (Chicago)Continue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 41.88572 ° E -87.637695 °
placeShow on map

Address

Lake Street Bridge

West Lake Street
60606 Chicago, Loop
Illinois, United States
mapOpen on Google Maps

linkWikiData (Q20486924)
linkOpenStreetMap (750299453)

Pink Line Crosses the Chicago River (4904402419)
Pink Line Crosses the Chicago River (4904402419)
Share experience

Nearby Places

Wolf Point, Chicago
Wolf Point, Chicago

Wolf Point is the location at the confluence of the North, South and Main Branches of the Chicago River in the present day Near North Side, Loop, and Near West Side community areas of Chicago. This fork in the river is historically important in the development of early Chicago. Located about 1.6 miles (2.6 km) from Lake Michigan, this was the location of Chicago's first three taverns, its first hotel, Sauganash Hotel, its first ferry, its first drug store, its first church, its first theater company, and the first bridges across the Chicago River. The name is said to possibly derive from a Native American Chief whose name translated to wolf, but alternate theories exist. Historically, the west bank of the river at the fork was called "Wolf Point," but in the 1820s and 1830s it came to denote the entire area and the settlement that grew up around the river-fork. Wolf Point is now often used more specifically to refer to a plot of land on the north side of the fork in the Near North Side community area owned by the Kennedy family as part of the larger Merchandise Mart Center complex. Today the north bank at the fork, is the location of a high-rise and a construction site, the west bank includes condominium high rises, commercial skyscrapers, and railroad tracks, while the south bank includes part of the Chicago Riverwalk and serves as the transition point of Wacker Drive from an east–west street to a north–south street.

Chicago River
Chicago River

The Chicago River is a system of rivers and canals with a combined length of 156 miles (251 km) that runs through the city of Chicago, including its center (the Chicago Loop). Though not especially long, the river is notable because it is one of the reasons for Chicago's geographic importance: the related Chicago Portage is a link between the Great Lakes and the Mississippi River Basin, and ultimately the Gulf of Mexico. The river is also noteworthy for its natural and human-engineered history. In 1887, the Illinois General Assembly decided to reverse the flow of the Chicago River through civil engineering by taking water from Lake Michigan and discharging it into the Mississippi River watershed, partly in response to concerns created by an extreme weather event in 1885 that threatened the city's water supply. In 1889, the Illinois General Assembly created the Chicago Sanitary District (now the Metropolitan Water Reclamation District) to replace the Illinois and Michigan Canal with the Chicago Sanitary and Ship Canal, a much larger waterway, because the former had become inadequate to serve the city's increasing sewage and commercial navigation needs. Completed by 1900, the project reversed the flow of the main stem and South Branch of the Chicago River by using a series of canal locks and increasing the flow from Lake Michigan into the river, causing the river to empty into the new canal instead. In 1999, the system was named a "Civil Engineering Monument of the Millennium" by the American Society of Civil Engineers (ASCE).The river is represented on the Municipal Flag of Chicago by two horizontal blue stripes. Its three branches serve as the inspiration for the Municipal Device, a three-branched, Y-shaped symbol that is found on many buildings and other structures throughout Chicago.