Driving over the new La Rue Road bridge, you will see the wider sidewalks and new bike lanes, and, on each side of the bridge, a safety barrier between the sidewalk and bike lane.
But there’s something else about this span over the Arboretum Waterway, something to experience under the bridge when you’re walking or biking alongside the waterway.
You won’t need to duck your head anymore! That’s right: In replacing the 70-year-old bridge, the campus regraded the paths underneath, lowering them to provide more headroom.
That’s not all you will notice from below: Take a look at the decorative arches on both sides of the bridge. Beautiful!
Christina De Martini Reyes, campus landscape architect, designed the decorative arches as an homage to an older bridge near the east end of the waterway, east of Old Davis Road.
“I felt it was very important to address the view of the [new] bridge from the Arboretum paths — to make the bridge a destination of sorts,” Reyes told Dateline ٺƵ in February 2019. “People strolling through the arboretum are having a slower, meandering experience than those using the bridge itself — and crossing under a bridge is a huge experiential moment. The lead-up to that is an opportunity to take advantage of.”
The bridge project also improved upon the steep ramps down and up from the paths along the waterway. Two ramps are now universally accessible, and the other two — which had been the steepest — have been converted to staircases.
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Dave Jones, 530-752-6556, dljones@ucdavis.edu