Samiksha Jaiswal (Editor)

Sam Houston Ship Channel Bridge

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Carries
  
Beltway 8

Locale
  
Harris County, Texas

Clearance below
  
53 m

Construction started
  
1978

Location
  
Harris County, Texas

Crosses
  
Houston Ship Channel

Width
  
59 feet (18 m)

Opened
  
6 May 1982

Total length
  
480 m

Material
  
Concrete

Sam Houston Ship Channel Bridge

Maintained by
  
Texas Turnpike Authority

Design
  
cantilevered concrete trapezoidal haunched hollow box girder bridge

Address
  
East Sam Houston Pkwy N, Houston, TX 77015, USA

Similar
  
Houston Ship Channel, Sidney Sherman Bridge, Fred Hartman Bridge, Washburn Tunnel, Winters‑Wimberley House

Sam Houston Tollway Ship Channel Bridge (formerly known as the Jesse H. Jones Memorial Bridge) is a bridge in Harris County, Texas. It was acquired from the then–Texas Turnpike Authority (TTA) (now North Texas Tollway Authority) on May 5, 1994, and is now a part of the Harris County Toll Road Authority system. The bridge opened to traffic in May 1982. It carries four lanes of Beltway 8 over the Houston Ship Channel with a clearance of 175 feet (53 m).

Contents

Conception

The 1952 City of Houston planning document recommended a second loop designated the Outer Belt. Harris County took control of the project in 1960. Efforts to construct the Beltway 8 crossing started in the mid-1960s, culminating in an effort vetoed by Governor John Connally on June 18, 1967. Voters twice rejected bond funds for the bridge, so the effort was reconstituted as a toll bridge. This did not work at that time.

In 1978, the Texas Turnpike Authority performed a study showing the project as feasible, and sold $102M (approximately $333.1M in 2008) of bonds to fund it.

Among designs looked at, a cable-stayed design was studied, but not sufficiently understood at the time. Such was later used on the Fred Hartman Bridge, but in 1978 when this bridge was designed, the only U.S. example of a cable-stayed bridge was the Ed Hendler Bridge, meaning there was a deficiency of design and construction experience for the bridge type.

Construction and financing

Construction completed in 1982 and the bridge was opened on May 6. At the time of completion, the bridge was the longest box girder span in the Western Hemisphere, which record it held until 1997 and the opening of the Confederation Bridge. It is no longer in the top 20 of longest box girder spans.

Traffic volume had been projected to be 4 million vehicles in 1982, but came in at only 1.69 million, a 58-percent shortfall. This was attributed to a lack of connections to the bridge. Additional ramps were completed in 1984, but the results were insufficient to service the bonds. The bonds were refinanced in 1985 at a rate of 12.625 percent (original rate was 7.54 percent), and could not be paid off until July 1, 2002. Total debt service as of the end of 1985 was $522M, with a minimum of $176M.

Traffic volume increased, but not sufficiently to cover the 1985 junk bonds. In 1994, Harris County took over the bridge for the consideration of TxDOT contributing money toward further area highway construction. By 2002, the average toll of $2 brought in approximately $20M, enough to cover bond payments.

In January 8th 2016, the toll bridge was EZ TAG only; According to the Texas Department of Transportation, this removed the toll plazas into the bridge and drivers going to the bridge will need an EZ Tag. This is because of a widening project.

References

Sam Houston Ship Channel Bridge Wikipedia