The Saddle Club Footbridge is a pedestrian bridge over Rock Creek in Washington, D.C. completed in 1934. It is one of eight such pedestrian bridges completed during the Great Depression. It has square-cut ashlar stone abutments, a concrete arch deck, and wooden railings. The bridge cost $3,830 to construct.[1]
![](http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/0/05/SOUTH_END%2C_LOOKING_NORTHEAST_-_Saddle_Club_Footbridge%2C_Washington%2C_District_of_Columbia%2C_DC_HAER_DC%2CWASH%2C597-1.tif/lossy-page1-220px-SOUTH_END%2C_LOOKING_NORTHEAST_-_Saddle_Club_Footbridge%2C_Washington%2C_District_of_Columbia%2C_DC_HAER_DC%2CWASH%2C597-1.tif.jpg)
References
edit- ^ Historic American Engineering Record (HAER) No. DC-36, "Saddle Club Footbridge"
38°55′12″N 77°03′12″W / 38.920114°N 77.053465°W