The Mountain Creek Trestle in the Beaver River valley of British Columbia, Canada, had a 150-foot long central Howe truss over the creek. On either side were smaller 30-foot trusses. In all, the trestle was 1,086 feet long and 164 feet high and required over 2 million board feet of timber making it one of the largest timber structures in the world at the time. Mountain Creek Trestle was replaced in 1902 by a steel structure consisting of 100-foot lattice trusses on steel towers, with 40-foot plate girders over the tops of the towers. High poly. 60,154 polys.
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