Harman Patil (Editor)

Alsea Bay Bridge

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Carries
  
US 101

Locale
  
near Waldport, Oregon

Opened
  
1991

Longest span
  
137 m

Bridge type
  
Arch bridge

Crosses
  
Alsea Bay

Clearance below
  
70 feet (21 m) (2nd)

Longest span
  
137 m

Location
  
Waldport

Architect
  
Conde McCullough

Alsea Bay Bridge

Design
  
concrete arch bridge (both)

Total length
  
3,011 feet (918 m) (1st) 2,910 feet (890 m) (2nd)

Address
  
Alsea River,, Waldport, OR 97394, United States

Similar
  
Alsea Bay Historic Interpretiv, Governor Patterson Memorial, Robinson Park, Beachside State Recreatio, Waldport Heritage Museum

The alsea bay bridge


The Alsea Bay Bridge is a concrete arch bridge that spans the Alsea Bay on U.S. Route 101 (US 101) near Waldport, Oregon.

Contents

Waldport oregon alsea bay bridge


History

There have been two bridges on this site.

The first bridge was designed by Conde McCullough and opened in 1936. It was a 3,011 feet (918 m) long, reinforced-concrete combination deck and through arch bridge built in 1936.

The hostile environment caused significant corrosion to the steel reinforcements. In 1972 the Oregon Department of Transportation began projects aimed at extending the life of the bridge. By the mid-1980s it was decided to replace the bridge rather than continuing costly rehabilitation efforts. The first bridge was demolished in 1991. Construction of the second bridge, designed by HNTB, began in 1988, and it was opened in the fall of 1991 at a cost of $42.4 million. The bridge is 2,910 ft (890 m) in total length, with a 450 ft (140 m) main span that provides 70 ft (21 m). of vertical clearance. The bridge has a latex concrete deck and the piers are significantly thicker than normal in an attempt to thwart corrosion. Its life expectancy is 75 to 100 years.

References

Alsea Bay Bridge Wikipedia