One of my more memorable one-day bike rides took me across the Golden Gate Bridge.
Although, if I recall correctly, there is an ample guard rail on the side of the bike lane, I don't recommend the ride (or, for that matter, a walk across the bridge) to agoraphobics. The span itself is about 2.7 km long, and in the middle of it, you can see only the water beneath and on either side of you, and distant land in front of you.
I haven't crossed the span in a long time. But the memory of my ride was still fresh on 17 October 1989, when the Loma Prieta earthquake struck California. If you were watching the World Series between the Oakland Athletics and San Francisco Giants--the two Major League Baseball teams on either side of the Bay--you saw the quake strike as the two teams were warming up for a game scheduled that day.
If you weren't paying attention to fall baseball, you saw later images of the quake, including those of the San Francsico-Oakland Bay Bridge, on which a portion of the upper deck collapsed. The bridge later reopened, but questions were raised.
Thankfully, the Golden Gate Bridge wasn't damaged. Still, I couldn't help but to visualize myself on it at the moment of the quake. I've been on drawbridges when they opened; I knew that the vibrations from an earthquake would be many orders of magnitude stronger than anything I experienced. And, of course, had the quake moved in a slightly different direction, a part of the Golden Gate could have fallen out.
I recalled my ride, the day of the 'quake and my reaction when I saw an announcement someone sent me. The eastern span of the new Bay Bridge will open on Tuesday, the day after Labor Day, at 5 am. The adjacent bike lane will open at the same time. The eastern span of the old bridge will be torn down as the western span of the new bridge is completed.
I want to bike the Golden Gate again some day. And I'd like to cycle the new Bay Bridge to compare the rides--and, of course, the views.
(I must say, I feel kind of sorry for both the old and new Bay Bridges. The new structure looks like it will be lovely, and the old one wasn't bad. But they both have to compete aesthetically with the Golden Gate. That's not a fair fight for any bridge!)
From Cyclelicio.us |
Although, if I recall correctly, there is an ample guard rail on the side of the bike lane, I don't recommend the ride (or, for that matter, a walk across the bridge) to agoraphobics. The span itself is about 2.7 km long, and in the middle of it, you can see only the water beneath and on either side of you, and distant land in front of you.
I haven't crossed the span in a long time. But the memory of my ride was still fresh on 17 October 1989, when the Loma Prieta earthquake struck California. If you were watching the World Series between the Oakland Athletics and San Francisco Giants--the two Major League Baseball teams on either side of the Bay--you saw the quake strike as the two teams were warming up for a game scheduled that day.
If you weren't paying attention to fall baseball, you saw later images of the quake, including those of the San Francsico-Oakland Bay Bridge, on which a portion of the upper deck collapsed. The bridge later reopened, but questions were raised.
Thankfully, the Golden Gate Bridge wasn't damaged. Still, I couldn't help but to visualize myself on it at the moment of the quake. I've been on drawbridges when they opened; I knew that the vibrations from an earthquake would be many orders of magnitude stronger than anything I experienced. And, of course, had the quake moved in a slightly different direction, a part of the Golden Gate could have fallen out.
I recalled my ride, the day of the 'quake and my reaction when I saw an announcement someone sent me. The eastern span of the new Bay Bridge will open on Tuesday, the day after Labor Day, at 5 am. The adjacent bike lane will open at the same time. The eastern span of the old bridge will be torn down as the western span of the new bridge is completed.
East Span of new San Francisco-Oakland Bay Bridge |
I want to bike the Golden Gate again some day. And I'd like to cycle the new Bay Bridge to compare the rides--and, of course, the views.
(I must say, I feel kind of sorry for both the old and new Bay Bridges. The new structure looks like it will be lovely, and the old one wasn't bad. But they both have to compete aesthetically with the Golden Gate. That's not a fair fight for any bridge!)