List of covered bridges
There are about 1600 covered bridges in the world currently. This is intended to be a list of all current covered bridges plus former notable covered bridges.
Asia
- China: covered bridges are called lángqiáo, or "wind and rain bridges" in Guizhou, traditionally built by the Dong. There are also covered bridges in Fujian. Taishun County, in southern Zhejiang province near the border of Fujian, has more than 900 covered bridges, many of them hundreds of years old, as well as a covered bridge museum. There are also a number in nearby Qingyuan County, as well as in Shouning County, in northern Fujian province. The Xijin Bridge in Zhejiang is one of the largest.
Europe
- Germany / Switzerland: Holzbrücke Bad Säckingen, over the river Rhine from Bad Säckingen, Germany, to Stein, Switzerland, first built before 1272, destroyed and re-built many times.
- Switzerland has many timber covered bridges: Bridge over the river Muota, Brunnen, near Lake Lucerne ; Berner Brücke/Pont de Berne over the Saane/Sarine, near Fribourg, ; Kapellbrücke and Spreuerbrücke over the River Reuss; Auguetbrücke and Neubrügg over the river Aare.
- France: on the River Ill in the city of Strasbourg - Ponts Couverts and Barrage Vauban.
- Czech Republic: Český Krumlov Castle Bridge
- Bulgaria: Lovech Covered Bridge over the river Osam.
- Italy: Ponte Vecchio over the river Brenta in Bassano del Grappa; Ponte Coperto over the Ticino River in Pavia
North America
Canada
The Hartland Bridge in New Brunswick is the longest covered bridge in the world. In 1900 Quebec, New Brunswick, and Ontario had an estimated 1000, 400, and five covered bridges respectively. In the 1990s there were 98 in Quebec, 62 in New Brunswick, and one in Ontario, the West Montrose Covered Bridge. Between 1969 and 2015, the number of surviving covered bridges in Canada dropped from about 400 to under 200.United States
At least two covered bridges make the claim of being the first built in the United States. Town records for Swanzey, New Hampshire, indicate their Carleton Bridge was built in 1789, but this remains unverified. Philadelphia, however, claims a bridge built in the early 1800s on 30th Street and over the Schuylkill River was the first, noting that investors wanted it covered to extend its life. Beginning around 1820, new designs were developed, such as the Burr, Lattice, and Brown trusses.According to Covered Bridges Today by Brenda Krekler, as many as 12,000 covered bridges once existed in the United States; that number dropped to under 1,500 by the 1950s. The National Society for the Preservation of Covered Bridges was formed in 1950.
The Federal Highway Administration encourages the preservation of covered bridges with its Covered Bridge Manual. By 2018, less than one thousand still survived in the US.
Today, covered bridges exist in many states:
- Alabama – see list of covered bridges in Alabama
- California – eleven were reported in 2002, including one at Knight's Ferry; see list of covered bridges in California.
- Connecticut – Two covered bridges span the Housatonic River in Litchfield County; one covered bridge spans the Salmon River in Middlesex County. See :Category:Covered bridges in Connecticut|Covered Bridges in Connecticut and list of covered bridges in Connecticut.
- Delaware – Three bridges remain in New Castle county; see list of covered bridges in Delaware.
- Georgia – see list of covered bridges in Georgia
- Illinois – five historic covered bridges remain in the state, most notably the Red Covered Bridge north of Princeton; see list of covered bridges in Illinois.
- Indiana – In 1980, Indiana was reported as having 130 extant covered bridges, with the highest number in Parke County. See list of covered bridges in Indiana.
- Iowa – Nineteen covered bridges were built in Iowa between 1855 and 1885; nine remain, five of which are in Madison County around Winterset.
- Kentucky – As many as 700 covered bridges existed in the past, though only 12 are known to still exist. 11 are open to the public, and one exists on private property; all are listed on the National Register of Historic Places. See list of covered bridges in Kentucky.
- Maine – see list of covered bridges in Maine
- Maryland – six remain as of 2015; see list of covered bridges in Maryland
- Massachusetts – see list of bridges on the National Register of Historic Places in Massachusetts and list of covered bridges in Massachusetts
- Michigan – see list of covered bridges in Michigan
- Minnesota – see list of covered bridges in Minnesota
- Missouri – see list of covered bridges in Missouri
- New Hampshire – At one time there were about 400 covered bridges in New Hampshire. It was reported that "at the end of twentieth century there were still nearly seventy covered bridges in New Hampshire." In 2006, it was reported that there are 54 surviving bridges administered by the New Hampshire Department of Transportation, the most famous being the Cornish–Windsor Covered Bridge, spanning the Connecticut River from Cornish, New Hampshire to Windsor, Vermont; this bridge is the longest wooden covered bridge in the United States. See list of covered bridges in New Hampshire.
- New Jersey – New Jersey had up to 35 covered bridges at its peak; many that were destroyed or damaged in various major floods are rebuilt as metal truss bridges. Today, two covered bridges remain: Green Sergeant's Covered Bridge and Scarborough Bridge.
- New York – see list of covered bridges in New York
- North Carolina – two remain, the Pisgah and Bunker Hill
- Ohio – 142 remain, the second-highest of any state, down from over 4,000 at peak. See List of covered bridges in Ohio.
- Oregon – see list of covered bridges in Oregon
- Pennsylvania – about 219 remain, the most of any state. See List of covered bridges on the National Register of Historic Places in Pennsylvania.
- Rhode Island – see list of covered bridges in Rhode Island
- South Carolina – The only remaining covered bridge in South Carolina is Campbell's Covered Bridge in Greenville County
- Tennessee – four remain as of 1980
- Vermont – "Vermont is justly famous for her covered bridges. No other state has built and still possesses so many of the old timbered crossings in so small an area." In 1996, 106 covered bridges were reported in Vermont. See list of covered bridges in Vermont.
- Virginia – see list of covered bridges in Virginia
- Washington – Only a few traditional covered bridges remain in Washington, and not all are publicly accessible; see list of covered bridges in Washington.
- West Virginia – see list of covered bridges in West Virginia
- Wisconsin – The only remaining historic covered bridge in Wisconsin is the covered bridge in Cedarburg. There are also the Smith Rapids Covered Bridge in Park Falls built in 1991, and the Springwater Volunteer Covered Bridge built in 1997.
Other covered bridges
- The Pont de Rohan in Landerneau, France and the Pont des Marchands in Narbonne are two of 45 inhabited bridges in Europe.
- A tubular bridge is a bridge built as a rigid box girder section within which the traffic is carried. Examples include the Britannia Bridge and the Conwy Railway Bridge in the United Kingdom.
- A skyway is a type of urban pedway consisting of an enclosed or covered footbridge between two buildings, designed to protect pedestrians from the weather. For example, the Bridge of Sighs in Cambridge, and Oxford's Bridge of Sighs and Logic Lane covered bridge.
- A jet bridge is an enclosed, movable connector which extends from an airport terminal gate to an airplane, allowing passengers to board and disembark without having to go outside.
- Some stone arch bridges are covered to protect pedestrians or as a decoration—as with the Italian Ponte Coperto and Rialto Bridge, and the Chùa Cầu in Vietnam.