The Wright's Ferry Bridge carries U.S. Route 30 (US 30) over the Susquehanna River between Columbia and Wrightsville, Pennsylvania.
[notes 1] Also known informally and locally as the Route 30 bridge, it was commissioned by the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania during the 1960s to relocate US 30 and bypass the river towns of Wrightsville and Columbia.
It was built using reinforced concrete and steel and has forty-six equal sections that are supported by forty-five piers.
Approximately a year after its opening, the bridge was shut down briefly so that an experimental weather-resistant coating could be applied to its roadway.
Tolls were never collected on this bridge, the sixth to have crossed the river in this general location.