The 1929
Smith River Bridge, also known as the Hiouchi Bridge or Bridge Wo. 1-06, was a rare example of a
cantilever highway
truss bridge within California, until it was demolished in 1989. The two-lane road bridge carried
U.S. Highway 199 across the Smith River. The structural steel components were fabricated by
Virginia Bridge & Iron Co. in Roanoke, shipped via the Panama Canal to San Francisco, then reloaded to a smaller coastal vessel and shipped to Crescent City. The suspended center span was a
Parker truss. It was the first cantilever truss type designed by the California Division of Highways Bridge Department engineers in 1928. The bridge type was briefly popular during the late 1920s to the late 1930s in the United States, but because it was best suited to specialized applications only limited numbers were built in the state. Its design was influenced by the first
Carquinez Bridge, designed by
David B. Steinman and completed in 1927 (demolished 2007). Studies for the replacement of the Smith River Bridge began in 1987. U. S. Highway 199 provides a link between
Highway 101 at Crescent City on the northern California coast, and
Interstate Highway 5 inland at Grants Pass, Oregon. The proposal to replace the bridge was based on its functionally obsolete structural condition. Because of the high percentage of heavy truck traffic using the route, the bridge had sustained damage from high loads over the years, causing concern that the bridge was susceptible to collapsing. Since it had been determined eligible for inclusion on the
National Register of Historic Places, it was required to be documented to
Historic American Engineering Record−HAER standards prior to its removal in 1989. == In popular culture ==