Rahul Sharma (Editor)

George V. Voinovich Bridges

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Locale
  
Cleveland, Ohio

Material
  
Steel, concrete

Body of water
  
Cuyahoga River

Maintained by
  
ODOT

Opened
  
9 November 2013

Designers
  
URS Corporation, HNTB

George V. Voinovich Bridges httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Carries
  
I-90 (Innerbelt Freeway)

Crosses
  
US 422 / SR 8 / SR 14 / SR 43 / SR 87 (Ontario Street/Broadway Avenue) RTA Rapid Transit Red Line Cuyahoga River Norfolk Southern Railway

Owner
  
Ohio Department of Transportation (ODOT)

The George V. Voinovich Bridges are two bridges in Cleveland, Ohio, U.S., that carry Interstate 90/Innerbelt Freeway over the Cuyahoga River. They are named for George Voinovich, former mayor of Cleveland, Governor of Ohio, and United States Senator.

Contents

The bridges' 90-foot piles are the largest ever manufactured in the United States.

Predecessor

The bridges were conceived as part of the Innerbelt Freeway rebuild to replace the 1959 Innerbelt Bridge, and the schedule of the project to build them was accelerated due to the deteriorating condition of the Innerbelt Bridge.

Westbound bridge

The westbound bridge was built immediately to the north of the Innerbelt Bridge. Construction on this bridge began on March 30, 2011, with a ceremonial groundbreaking following on May 2. It opened to Ontario Street ramp traffic on November 9, 2013, had opened to other ramp traffic and I-90 westbound mainline traffic by November 17, and opened to eastbound traffic, which used the westbound bridge until the completion of the eastbound bridge, on November 23. The bridge was dedicated to George Voinovich during the ribbon-cutting ceremony on November 8, 2013.

Eastbound bridge

The eastbound bridge was built in the former location of the Innerbelt Bridge. Early in the project, the proposed date of completion varied widely. Construction on the bridge had begun by November 3, 2014; the bridge opened in limited capacity the evening of September 24, 2016 after a ribbon-cutting ceremony earlier in the day, opening in full on October 24. This bridge was named for George Voinovich prior to the naming of the westbound bridge.

References

George V. Voinovich Bridges Wikipedia