The bridge is located over an inlet in the reservoir approximately one half-mile west of the Goldens Bridge station on the Metro-NorthHarlem Line and Interstate 684. It straddles the line between the town of Lewisboro on the east and Somers on the west. NY 138 crosses the reservoir to the north. It is most clearly seen from here, although it can also be seen through the woods from commuter trains near the station. It is surrounded by woodlands, part of the reservoir's protected watershed lands, all owned, like the bridge, by the New York City Department of Environmental Protection. The former route of the tracks is visible on both approaches to the bridge.
Structure
Both trusses are long, consisting of nine identical panels. The web is deep. Two concrete abutments support the bridge above mean water level. Its pin-connected superstructure uses wrought iron Phoenix columns in its top chord and compression members. The end posts and upper chord are made up of six flanged cast elements riveted together. The intermediate verticals and lateral struts have four apiece. The diagonals and lower chord have rectangular eyebars wide. Round bars are used for the counters and sway braces. The ties are on iron s riveted to transverse iron floor beams. Both portals are decorated with quatrefoilbrackets and finials.
History
The bridge was originally the smallest of three spans in a viaduct-bridge combination along the former West Shore Line at the mouth of Rondout Creek in Kingston, to the north. It was built in 1883 by Clarke, Reeves & Company, a Philadelphia-based subsidiary of the Phoenix Iron Works as a double-tracked structure, known administratively within the Central as Bridge 141. In 1904, the railroad built another bridge at the Rondout that could carry the entire load on one span. At the same time, New York City was beginning to buy, clear and flood land for its water supply system in the Croton River watershed. Railroads in the area were required, under their agreements with the city, to install bridges over any inundated areas at their own expense. The railroad decided to move Bridge 141, now Bridge L-158, south to the new reservoir where it would easily bridge the gap needed for the Mahopac Branch from the former New York and Harlem Railroadmain line. The branch, formerly the New York & Mahopac Railroad, served what had been a summer resort community in the 19th century. Since it was a single-track line, the bridge was rebuilt that way, its width reduced to. Service on the Mahopac Branch continued until 1960. The tracks were eventually dismantled to and from the bridge, but the bridge itself remained. In 1976, a survey team from the Historic American Engineering Record found that it remained in good condition despite the lack of maintenance or use. Its presence on New York City watershed land, where public access is tightly restricted, has helped preserve it as well.