The Rock Island Bridge is a historic railroad bridge crossing the Kansas River in Kansas City, Kansas. It connects the Armourdale neighborhood to the West Bottoms area near the Kansas-Missouri state line. The Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific Railroad (the Rock Island line) completed the steel Pennsylvania through truss bridge in 1905. Rail operations ceased in the 1970s, and the bridge was dormant for decades.
In 2022, the Unified Government (UG) of Wyandotte County and Kansas City, Kansas acquired ownership. Flying Truss, LLC, is a startup company that is redeveloping the structure into a public crossing, entertainment district, and event venue, described as "America's first trailhead and entertainment district over a river".
The bridge site provided a vital rail connection for the Kansas City Stockyards across the Kansas River. The 1903 Kansas River flood destroyed the Rock Island line's previous wood-pile bridge at this location.
The Rock Island Railroad commissioned the American Bridge Company (formed in 1900 from a merger of 28 companies and part of U.S. Steel from 1901) to build the replacement structure. It opened in 1905 at an approximate cost of . The design deployed two Pennsylvania-style truss spans, each at , using riveted Carnegie steel, and set on concrete foundations sunk into the riverbed. In 1921, the United States Army Corps of Engineers widened the river channel, which required adding a third, shorter truss span on the east side. This established the bridge's length.
During the Great Flood of 1951, the river's water level reportedly reached the bottom of the bridge, which withstood the flood that devastated the stockyards and the rest of West Bottoms. Due to this widespread disaster, the Army Corps of Engineers hired construction firm L.G. Barcus and Sons in Kansas City, Kansas, to install a protective lifting system. It was completed around 1951âÂÂ1952, using four screw-lift gates which allow the three truss spans to be raised by to clear floodwaters.
Rail service over the bridge declined with the stockyards and ceased around the 1970s. The Rock Island Railroad filed for bankruptcy in 1975 and was liquidated in 1980. The bridge was reportedly sold to the St. Louis Southwestern Railway. In 1987, the City of Kansas City, Missouri purchased the bridge and its access easements with the unrealized intention of using it as a pedestrian connection for Kemper Arena parking. The bridge then remained unused, as the Kansas City Stockyards held its final auction in 1991.
A boat outing by "visionary" Michael Zeller and his wife, inspired him to rethink a bridge as being land, and to imagine a "steel park across a river". He joked that someone could install utilities and a restaurant called "Chicken on a Bridge". After his many failed attempts to persuade other entities to launch this project, he co-founded Flying Truss, LLC specifically to do it.
In 2017, a MARC Planning Sustainable Places study included engineering analysis and conceptual design. In 2022, the Unified Government (UG) of Wyandotte County and Kansas City, Kansas bought the bridge from the City of Kansas City, Missouri, for . This enabled redevelopment plans proposed by Flying Truss, LLC, which leased the bridge for development and operation under a long-term agreement reported as 33 years with a 33-year renewal option, totaling 66 years.
The redevelopment project cost was estimated at as of July 2024. Initial funding included allocated by the UG. Funding sources combine private investment, philanthropic contributions (including support from the Sunderland, Helzberg, and Dickinson Foundations, and a fund at the Greater Kansas City Community Foundation), and public funds, including a grant from the Kansas SPARK (Strengthening People and Revitalizing Kansas) program. Raising the bridge was necessary for parity with the surrounding modern levee system built by the Army Corps of Engineers for its 750-year plan for the areawide floodplain. Cost increases, including for bridge strengthening requested by the UG, and related to raising the bridge, were expected to be partially offset by revenue from a Community Improvement District (CID) created for the project, which would also repay the county's initial budget allocation.
In March 2023, Flying Truss hired L.G. Barcus and Sons, which had installed the original lift system after the Great Flood of 1951, as the general contractor for the structural modifications, which was conducted without marine operations. Major work included removing the old railroad ties and of rails (weighing over ), adding over of new steel and nearly of concrete, removing graffiti, and installing new utility lines for water, sewer, electrical, and gas. In June 2023, the project team raised the entire bridge structure by to establish its permanent height above the river to conform to Army Corps of Engineers standards; this lift utilized the original 1950s gears and screw jacks, operated by new motors. To expand the usable space, steel cantilevers were added to widen the central truss span, creating a main deck wide and spanning approximately . An upper event deck, measuring long by wide, was constructed above the main level, and new decking and railings were installed, with some salvaged rails incorporated as footrests.
The completed venue is planned to offer multiple kitchens, bars, coffee shops, public restrooms, and event spaces. The site deliberately connects to areawide public trailheads developed by the Unified Government along the Kansas River levees, part of the planned Kansas Waterfront park space intended to link the Armourdale and Argentine neighborhoods.
The project is part of the High Line Network, which recognizes significant infrastructure reuse projects and creates vibrant public spaces in North America. Midwest Contractor magazine called the Rock Island Bridge "a catalyst for revitalization of the area" for other hospitality and retail developers to build around.