Queen post
| Interior structure of a covered bridge that uses a queen-post structure | |
| Ancestor | Truss bridge | 
|---|---|
| Related | None | 
| Descendant | None | 
| Carries | Pedestrians, livestock, vehicles | 
| Span range | short to medium | 
| Material | wood planks | 
| Movable | No | 
| Design effort | medium | 
| Falsework required | Sometimes | 
A queen post is a tension member in a truss that can span longer openings than a king post truss. A king post uses one central supporting post, whereas the queen post truss uses two. Even though it is a tension member, rather than a compression member, they are commonly still called a post. A queen post is often confused with a queen strut, one of two compression members in roof framing which do not form a truss in the engineering sense.
The double punch truss appeared in Central Europe during the Renaissance.