Los Peñasquitos Creek Arch Bridge
Los Peñasquitos Creek Arch Bridge | |
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Coordinates | 32°56′39.5″N 117°6′28.2″W / 32.944306°N 117.107833°W |
Locale | San Diego, California, USA |
Official name | Cara Knott Memorial Bridge |
Characteristics | |
Material | Reinforced concrete |
Total length | 434 feet |
Longest span | 220 feet |
History | |
Opened | 1949 |
Location | |
The Los Peñasquitos Creek Arch Bridge is a pair of road bridges in San Diego, California.
Completed in 1949, the original bridge is a reinforced concrete open-spandrel arch-bridge with an overall length of 434 feet (132 m), and arch span of 220 feet (67 m). It now serves as a service road and bike path.
The new Los Peñasquitos Creek bridge was first built in 1966 as the southbound lanes of the U.S. Route 395 freeway. It was completely replaced by a prestressed concrete girder bridge during the widening of the Interstate 15 freeway in 1976.
Cara Knott Memorial Bridge
In 1995, the new bridge was renamed the Cara Knott Memorial Bridge after 20-year-old Cara Knott, a San Diego State University student who was stopped and then subsequently murdered by California Highway Patrol officer Craig Peyer near the bridge on the night of December 27, 1986. Peyer was later convicted in the case and is serving a 25 years-to-life sentence in prison. In 2000, Cara's father, Sam, died of a heart attack, just a few yards from the exact place where his daughter was killed, while taking care of a garden the family built to honor Cara.[1]