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This bridge is an example of a bridge that demonstrates the transition from built-up beams to rolled beams for use in bridge work. Earlier in the history of iron and steel bridges, built-up beams were employed because the mills were incapable of rolling beams as large as were needed for a bridge. As such, rolled beams would only be found for smaller structural elements on a bridge, and/or riveted to other rolled beams when forming a built-up beam. The Jack Glass Road Bridge, constructed in 1930 is different however. In this case, the largest beams, the top chord and end post, are rolled, while all the other smaller truss members are built-up beams. This suggests a period in which the mills were capable of rolling large beams, but at a higher cost, and as such, built-up beams remained less expensive. As a result, with this bridge, builders selected a rolled beam for the top chord, which would have been stronger and more reliable than a built-up beam, while employing the less expensive rolled beams for the other members. The bridge harkens back to a time where labor was cheap and materials were expensive. As such, even though it would take a lot more time and workers to create a built-up beam, the cost of hiring such work was made up for by the savings in materials. Today, this is usually the opposite.
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