Now named for the artist
Andy Warhol, a Pittsburgh native, this structure is one of three parallel bridges called
The Three Sisters, the others being the
Roberto Clemente Bridge and the
Rachel Carson Bridge. The Three Sisters are
self-anchored suspension bridges and are historically significant because they are the only trio of nearly identical bridges — as well as the first self-anchored suspension spans — built in the United States. The bridge was renamed for Warhol on March 18, 2005, as part of the tenth-anniversary celebration for the
Andy Warhol Museum. The museum is nearby at 117 Sandusky Street, a street which leads to the bridge from the north side of the river on Pittsburgh's
North Shore. On August 11, 2013, the Andy Warhol Bridge was covered with 580 knitted and crocheted panels in a
yarn bombing project known as Knit the Bridge that lasted for four weeks. This is the third bridge on the site, the first having been demolished in early 1884. Construction of its replacement began in 1884, opening to traffic in 1887. ==Gallery==