The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Rebuilt Rogers Bridge will link Duluth, Johns Creek parks

Officials to break ground for joint project Monday.

- By Tyler Wilkins tyler.wilkins@ajc.com

News for Peachtree Corners, Duluth and others on Twitter: @gwinnettne­wsnow

Residents in Duluth and Johns Creek will be able to walk, jog or bike across the Chattahooc­hee River to see their neighbors by next summer.

Duluth officials will break ground Monday on a joint project with Johns Creek, Gwinnett County and Ful- ton County to demolish and rebuild a replica of the historic Rogers Bridge located in its namesake park. The pedestrian bridge will connect the two counties, allowing visitors to traverse from Rogers Bridge Park in Duluth to the future Cauley Creek Park in Johns Creek.

Besides using modern engineerin­g techniques, the new bridge will be a replica of the old 228-foot-long bridge, said Margie Pozin, city engi- neer for Duluth. It will be 14-feet wide, allowing twoway traffic of pedestrian­s and bikers to cross at the same time, she said.

The original bridge was named after the Rogers family, who operated a ferry system across the Chattahooc­hee River. City officials believe the bridge dates back to 1912 — built to replace the ferry system to transport cotton over the river — and fell into disuse in the 1970s, Pozin said.

“You can’t get more warm and fuzzier than a park-topark connection,” Pozin said. “If you wanted to kayak and you live in Johns Creek, you don’t have to drive your kayaks across the river on Ga. 120 and come back up Peachtree Industrial Boulevard to get to Rogers Bridge Park; you can just walk your kayak across the bridge.”

Duluth and Johns Creek started planning for the project after completing a bridge condition survey in 2014, gathering feedback from residents and spending about four years on pre-constructi­on, Pozin said.

Constructi­on on the project will cost about $7.2 million, with $5.1 million coming from the Atlanta Regional Commission and $700,000 from the Georgia Department of Transporta­tion. Duluth, Johns Creek, Gwinnett County and Fulton County will each put $350,000 toward constructi­on costs. The partners also spent about $700,000 on pre-constructi­on and design costs for the new bridge.

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