The Sixth Street Bridge Series #0050
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The Los Angeles River has been the heart, and the bane, of Los Angeles communities since the city was established in 1850. The historic downtown bridges that cross the river --the 1st, 4th, 6th, and 7th Street viaducts, as well as the Cesar Chavez (formerly Macy Street) Bridge-- connect the vastly different urban districts of downtown Los Angeles with East Los Angeles, with its long history of various ethnic enclaves through the years. The need to replace the rapidly deteriorating, historic 6th Street Bridge coincides with the gentrification of the riverfront warehouse districts on the west bank of the river and gentrifications' encroachment on East L.A. neighborhoods, a process that is occurring throughout the city.
Demolition of the historic Sixth Street Viaduct crossing the Los Angeles River, constructed in 1932 and the longest of 14 bridges built, was necessitated by deterioration of the concrete used during construction. A heavy duty hydraulic jack hammer on tractor treads is pictured here demolishing a decorative column near the east end of the bridge, while a worker in a cherry picker hoses down the dust with water pumped from water trucks.
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2021-10-20T22:01:23-07:00
02/06/2016
Seaver Center for Western History Research, Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County
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Gary Leonard
Copyright Gary Leonard. Permission to publish, quote or reproduce must be secured from the Seaver Center for Western History Research and the copyright holder.