| 1. | The bridge is of queen post truss design.
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| 2. | It consists of 10-span timber deck Queen Post truss viaduct, with each span measuring.
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| 3. | This primary support is supplemented by a queen post truss system that flank the king truss walls.
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| 4. | Internally, the upper floor is dominated by Queen Post trusses which meet at the gable crossing with cruciform trusses.
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| 5. | Otis Hamer, a veteran constructor of bridges, built the queen post truss structure for Lincoln County in 1938.
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| 6. | The interior has been altered but the original queen post trusses and timber ceiling remain intact above a suspended plasterboard ceiling.
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| 7. | The roof frame of traditional type was changed to trussed roof-using King post and Queen post trusses, making it possible to span large areas.
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| 8. | It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1999 . It is the last example of a queen post truss bridge extant in Michigan.
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| 9. | It is stylistically similar to the bridges located in nearby Lyndon, which also feature queen post trusses, half-height siding, and broad roofs.
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| 10. | The ceiling of the nave is lined on the rake and exposed timber trusses, a variant of a queen post truss with arched braces, span across nave.
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