From left

From left

Paving the way: Railroad Bridge link in Discovery Trail expected to reopen Saturday

SEQUIM — The Olympic Discovery Trail across Railroad Bridge is expected to reopen to pedestrians and bicyclists Saturday afternoon, said Powell Jones, director of the Dungeness River Audubon Center.

Jones said he didn’t yet know what time the bridge would open.

The bridge was closed Feb. 15 for volunteers and contractors to complete work on the cement deck of the new west trestle.

New deck surface

They replaced the slick wooden decking and aging wood on the railings of the 101-year-old bridge with cement.

Volunteers from the Peninsula Trails Coalition will continue working on final details on the bridge for the next week and might close the bridge again as needed, Jones said.

“It’s right on schedule,” he said.

The cement work includes a non-slip brushed cement surface and decorative panels featuring Northwest Native American artwork, as well as a compass rose in the center of the west trestle observation platform.

Jones said getting the cement work done on time was a challenge.

“We had such an awful stretch of weather [when the work was scheduled],” he said.

The volunteer crew from the Peninsula Trails Coalition kept working though the weather.

“The job the volunteers did was fabulous,” Jones said.

The new west trestle of Railroad Bridge was dedicated in December with a ceremony including cedar boughs, blessings and speeches praising the improvements made at the Dungeness River crossing.

New trestle

The bridge — and the trail — had been closed for 10 months while the 570-foot wooden trestle, which had been damaged in a storm and river flood in February 2015, was replaced with a steel 750-foot trestle.

However, the weather was too wet and too cold to finish the deck at that time, and the work was scheduled for February and March.

The Jamestown S’Klallam tribe has owned the bridge and the adjacent Railroad Bridge Park at 2151 W. Hendrickson Road since 1991.

About half of the trestle bridge passes over the cobbled riverbed, including the new main channel where the river settled after a February 2015 flood that rerouted the river.

The other half of the trestle passes over wooded floodplain covered with ferns, trees and berry bushes.

Since the tribe took over the bridge and surrounding lands, it has received more than $2.7 million in seven grants from five sources to restore and improve the area.

The tribe also received a $100,000 grant from First Federal to replace the bridge’s wooden decking with cement to match the surface of the new trestle.

The replacement trestle allows logs and migrating salmon to pass beneath without hindrance by reducing the number of support beams needed to prop up the walkway, the tribe has said.

________

Reporter Arwyn Rice can be reached at 360-452-2345, ext. 56250, or at arice@peninsuladailynews.com.

More in News

Claus Janssen, left, and Glenn Jansen, members of Port Townsend Urban Sketchers, sketch the fountain at Manresa Castle in Port Townsend. The group chooses a different location every month and meets at 10 a.m. and sketches until noon. (Steve Mullensky/for Peninsula Daily News)
Urban sketching

Claus Janssen, left, and Glenn Jansen, members of Port Townsend Urban Sketchers,… Continue reading

Chimacum location selected for a pool

Public facilities district could change site

Port Angeles school board agrees on salary for next superintendent

Directors say $220K will help them in competitive search

Nellie Bridge.
Clallam County names second poet laureate

Two-year term set to begin in April

Pacific Northwest Ballet dancers Elle Macy, center, and Dylan Wald take their bows with pianist Paige Roberts Molloy at Sunday’s Winter Ballet Gala. Roberts Molloy played Beethoven’s Sonata in F minor, the “Appassionata,” as Macy and Wald danced across the Port Angeles High School Performing Arts Center stage. (Diane Urbani de la Paz/for Peninsula Daily News)
Taking a bow

Pacific Northwest Ballet dancers Elle Macy, center, and Dylan Wald take their… Continue reading

Kathy Downer, a Sequim City Council member, resigned on Jan. 13 to spend more time with family. She was elected to office in 2021 and reelected to a different position in 2023. (Matthew Nash/Olympic Peninsula News Group)
Interviews are set for Sequim opening

Special meeting Feb. 3 for council candidates

Kindergartener Zoey Griffin eats lunch with classmates in Amy Skogsberg’s class. For most of Greywolf Elementary’s history, students have eaten in their classrooms as the school was built without a dedicated cafeteria. A bond proposal includes building a cafeteria at the school, improving its parking lot and bus loop, and updating its air handler and heating units. (Matthew Nash/Olympic Peninsula News Group)
Sequim schools bond would include cafeteria at Greywolf Elementary

Transportation center also needs attention, staff say

Layla Forêt is the new market director for the Sequim Farmers and Artisans Market. She formerly served as marketing manager. (Sequim Farmers and Artisans Market)
Sequim Farmers and Artisans Market hires director

Forêt has worked in marketing for past decade

Weekly flight operations scheduled

There will be field carrier landing practice operations for aircraft… Continue reading

Commander R.J. Jameson, center, exits the change of command ceremony following his assumption of the role on Friday at the American Legion Hall in Port Townsend. (Elijah Sussman/Peninsula Daily News)
Naval Magazine Indian Island sees change in command

Cmdr. R.J. Jameson steps into role after duties across world

Allen Chen.
Physician officer goes back to roots

OMC’s new hire aims to build services

f
Readers give $111K in donations to Home Fund

Donations can be made for community grants this spring