Monday, September 20, 2010

Metro North Bridge Fire That Stalled New York Traffic, Re-Opened

The giant Metro-North Bridge, a railroad bridge that serves trains going in and out of Grand Central Station, was the scene of a fire Monday, according to The New York Times.



Speculation is that the fire itself broke out as the result of a transformer that went supercritical and blew up, sending a giant plume of smoke thousands of feet into the air, and visible all the way to New Jersey.

The reason for the fire that was stated has not been confirmed as of this writing.

The blaze itself spread due to the placement of wood pilings that surround the bridge's steel footings at the waterline.

The bridge itself is known by several names: The 138th Street Bridge, The Park Avenue Lift Bridge, and The Metro North Bridge. The trains through the bridge into Manhattan also serve Harlem.

Metro North Bridge Re-Opens

As of this writing, the Metro North Bridge fire was brought under control and the bridge has reopened and did so at 1:35 PM EDT. Traffic is operating in both directions.

There's still no word of what caused the fire to breakout, stopping traffic at 11:30 AM EDT Monday morning.

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