Portland, Oregon Pictures, Scenic Photography:  PortlandBridges.com

Shoot Portland Facing East Day (03/29/2004)
(33 Images)


View of Mt. Saint Helens, Fremont Bridge, Trees


Broadway Bridge


Fremont Bridge and Mt. Saint Helens, Daytime


Portland Buildings and Mt. Hood, Daytime


Portland Buildings, Daytime


Portland Buildings, Daytime


Portland Buildings and Mt. Hood, Daytime


Portland Buildings and Mt. Hood, Daytime


Mt. Hood from International Rose Test Garden


Mt. Hood from International Rose Test Garden


Mt. Hood from International Rose Test Garden


Mt. Hood from International Rose Test Garden


Mt. Hood from International Rose Test Garden


Mt. Hood, Daytime


Mt.Hood, view from Pittock Mansion


Mt.Hood, view from Pittock Mansion


Mt.Hood, view from Pittock Mansion


Mt.Hood, view from Pittock Mansion


Fremont Bridge and Mt. Saint Helens, Daytime


Fremont Bridge and Mt. Saint Helens, Daytime


Mt. Hood, Daytime


Mt. Saint Helens, Daytime


Rose Garden Arena from Council Crest


Oregon Convention Center from Council Crest


Portland Buildings from Council Crest


Portland Buildings from Council Crest


Fremont Bridge


Portland Buildings from Vista Viaduct


Portland Buildings, Mt. Hood from Vista Viaduct


Portland Buildings, Mt. Hood from Vista Viaduct


Portland Buildings, Mt. Hood from Vista Viaduct


Portland Buildings from Vista Viaduct


Fremont Bridge and Mt. Saint Helens, Daytime


 
 
Fremont Bridge and Mt. Saint Helens, Daytime

Image is copyrighted and may not be copied or used without permission.


Location: Portland, Oregon

Mt. Saint Helens: This active volcano had its last serious eruption in May, 1980, but had a minor but attention-getting eruption of ash in March 2005 (see photos in this gallery). Mt. Saint Helens was named by British explorers in 1792, after Baron St. Helens. It is only 50 miles from Portland, Oregon.

See the WikiPedia entry on Mt. Saint Helens.

Fremont Bridge: Finished in 1973, this is Portland's newest bridge over the Willamette. The double-decked Fremont Bridge connects northbound I-405 and westbound US-30 to I-5. It weighs 6,000 tons and was lifted 170 feet - a Guinness Book of World Records entry for heaviest lift ever made at the time.  The tied arch span is 902 feet long and was not built on-site but floated on the river into place. [1]


References:
    [1] Smith, Dwight. Historic Highway Bridges of Oregon. Second Edition. Portland, Oregon: Oregon Historical Society, 1989. P. 300.

PhotoID DREB0CRW02097 Specifications:
Size:3072x2048 pixels, 300DPI up to 10.24" x 6.83"
Largest Print Size:Great Prints up to 24"x36" in size
Camera Exposure/Specs:1/125 Sec, f8.0, ISO 100, Lens 100.0 to 300.0 at 230mm
Shoot Time/Day:03/29/2004 - 12:35 PST


Search for Images

Site Highlights




Related Photos


Recent Shoots: