Pont Rouge (Red Bridge) over the Palmer River in Sainte-Agathe-de-Lotbinière, Quebec, Canada
© Jean Surprenant/Getty Image
A bridge to the past. Pont Rouge
When the Pont Rouge (Red Bridge) of Sainte-Agathe-de-Lotbinière was built over the Palmer River in 1928, covered bridges were already commonplace here in Quebec. Simple designs imported from the United States allowed relatively untrained workers to quickly construct crossings like this. 'Ponts rouges' (often called this whether or not they were painted red) popped up wherever rural French Canadians required a convenient river crossing—as many as 1,500 were built between the late 1800s and the 1950s. Today fewer than 100 still stand, and some—like this one—are protected by local and provincial agencies for historic preservation.
Related Images
Bing Today Images
Tigh Mor Trossachs on Loch Achray, Scotland
Nov 05, 2022
Albarracín, Spain
Nov 05, 2020
Neuschwanstein Castle in southern Bavaria, Germany
Nov 05, 2018
A bald cypress in the Atchafalaya Basin, Louisiana
From NASA’s Terra satellite, an image of fallstreak holes in clouds over the southern United States
The Quinault Rainforest in Olympic National Park, Washington
Stepping stones in Tollymore Forest Park, County Down, Northern Ireland
St. Mary Falls in Glacier National Park, Montana
Hocking Hills State Park in Ohio for National Public Lands Day
Merced River in Yosemite National Park, California
Letchworth State Park, New York