Charles R. Fenwick Bridge
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Charles R. Fenwick Bridge
Summary
Charles R. Fenwick Bridge is a railway bridge[1].
Key Facts
- Charles R. Fenwick Bridge is located in Washington, D.C.[2].
- Charles R. Fenwick Bridge is in the country of United States[3].
- Charles R. Fenwick Bridge's transport network is recorded as Washington Metro[4].
- Charles R. Fenwick Bridge's image is recorded as Yellow Line Train Crossing Fenwick Bridge.jpg[5].
- Charles R. Fenwick Bridge's instance of is recorded as railway bridge[6].
- Charles R. Fenwick Bridge's instance of is recorded as box girder bridge[7].
- Charles R. Fenwick Bridge's owned by is recorded as WMATA[8].
- Charles R. Fenwick is named after Charles R. Fenwick Bridge[9].
- Charles R. Fenwick Bridge's crosses is recorded as Potomac River[10].
- Charles R. Fenwick Bridge's made from material is recorded as steel[11].
- Charles R. Fenwick Bridge's part of is recorded as 14th Street Bridges[12].
- Charles R. Fenwick Bridge's part of is recorded as C Route[13].
- Charles R. Fenwick Bridge's Commons category is recorded as Charles R. Fenwick Bridge[14].
- Charles R. Fenwick Bridge's Structurae structure ID is recorded as 20007105[15].
- Charles R. Fenwick Bridge's coordinate location is recorded as {'globe': 'http://www.wikidata.org/entity/Q2', 'altitude': None, 'latitude': 38.87488888888889, 'longitude': -77.03921944444444, 'precision': 2.777777777777778e-06}[16].
- Charles R. Fenwick Bridge's track gauge is recorded as 1429 mm track gauge[17].
- Charles R. Fenwick Bridge's date of official opening is recorded as +1983-04-30T00:00:00Z[18].
- Charles R. Fenwick Bridge's carries thoroughfare is recorded as Yellow Line[19].
- Charles R. Fenwick Bridge's state of use is recorded as in use[20].
Body
Geography
Charles R. Fenwick Bridge is in the country of United States[3]. It is located in Washington, D.C.[2]. Part of include 14th Street Bridges[12], an architectural ensemble[21], in United States[22] and C Route[13], a rapid transit line[23], in United States[24].
Designation and Status
Recorded instance of include railway bridge[6] and box girder bridge[7].
History and Context
Charles R. Fenwick Bridge's owned by is recorded as WMATA[8]. Charles R. Fenwick is named after it[9].