Photograph by Divi Logan. 8 April 2025.
Introduction: What is a Bascule Bridge?
The word “bascule” comes from the French for “seesaw” and captures the idea of balancing the weight on either side of the pivot point. Bascule bridges use counterweights to help raise and lower the spans. Most of the bridges in use during boat runs along the Chicago River have two leaves, or sections.


Adjacency and Access in the Urban Environment: Essential Principles in Urban Infrastructure
Chicago’s bascule bridges display the principles of adjacency and access, especially relevant to bridge design and transportation hubs.

Bridge operators access the houses from the sidewalks and control workings on the bridge, including the gates (one here shown with the yellow box and red and white arm), and the movement of the leaves, which make up the road deck. Dearborn Street Bridge: 1963.
Resources
- Microsoft Copilot. “Describe the architectural planes in the Dearborn Street Bridge.” Microsoft Copilot, copilot.microsoft.com/chats/tJNuHANqx38S9RDqQUnqF. Accessed 8 Apr. 2025.
- “Adjacency and Access in Urban Infrastructure.” Copilot, Microsoft, https://copilot.microsoft.com/chats/uJRdrJxurJ39rka9UcXpN. Accessed 9 Apr. 2025.
- “Principles of Adjacency and Access Related to the Dearborn Street Bridge Tender’s House.” Copilot, Microsoft, https://copilot.microsoft.com/chats/uJRdrJxurJ39rka9UcXpN. Accessed 9 Apr. 2025.
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