Washington Bridge (Providence, Rhode Island)

Coordinates: 41°49′09″N 71°23′13″W / 41.819076°N 71.386993°W / 41.819076; -71.386993
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Washington Bridge
Washington Bridge, Providence
Coordinates41°49′09″N 71°23′13″W / 41.819076°N 71.386993°W / 41.819076; -71.386993
CarriesTen lanes of I-195 / US 6 / US 44 / US 1A and 2 lanes of the East Bay Bike Path
CrossesSeekonk River
LocaleBetween Providence and East Providence, Rhode Island
OwnerRhode Island Department of Transportation
Maintained byRhode Island Department of Transportation
ID numberSouth span: 2000, North span: 7000
Characteristics
MaterialSteel
Total lengthSouth span: 509.3 metres (1,671 ft), North span: 580.3 metres (1,904 ft)
WidthSouth span: 20.7 metres (68 ft), North span: 18.6 metres (61 ft)
No. of spans15
Clearance belowSouth span: 12.5 metres (41 ft), North span: 12.8 metres (42 ft)
History
ArchitectCarl L. Otto
Engineering design byClarence W. Hudson
Construction endSouth span: 1930 (reconstructed 2008), North span: 1969 (reconstructed 1998)
Opened25 September 1930 (25 September 1930)
ReplacesSwing bridge of the same name built in 1885
Statistics
TollNone
Location
Map
References
National Bridge Inventory

The Washington Bridge is a series of three bridges carrying Interstate 195, US Route 6, US Route 44, and U.S. Route 1A over the Seekonk River connecting India Point in Providence to Watchemoket Square in East Providence, Rhode Island. The historic portion of the bridge dating to 1930 serves as the pedestrian crossing, and bike link to the East Bay Bike Path. The pedestrian span is also a part of the Washington-Rochambeau National Historic Trail. As of December 11, 2023, the westbound bridge is closed to all but emergency vehicles due to critical safety issues. On March 14, 2024, Governor Dan McKee announced that the westbound bridge cannot be repaired and will have to be replaced, requiring at least two years.[1]

History[edit]

Prior to the construction of bridges, tidal ferries provided the only means to cross the river. Tides propelled the ferries along guide ropes anchored on both sides. However, the ferries were unable to operate during bad weather, and travelers could be stranded on each side. Replacing the ferries with bridges would be a major advance in transportation.[2]

Previous spans[edit]

1793 Washington Bridge plaque replica

The first bridge in this general location was constructed in 1793, when John Brown's Providence South Bridge Company built a covered drawbridge. This bridge served as part of a turnpike that followed Taunton Avenue from Watchemoket Square to Taunton, Massachusetts. The same year, Brown's brother Moses built the Central Bridge (red bridge) to the north, connecting what are now the Providence and East Providence ends of Waterman Avenue. Replacements were built in 1807 and 1815 after each existing bridge was destroyed by weather.[2] A steel truss swing bridge was then built in 1885, and carried a street car line.

Current span[edit]

Plaque on the Washington Bridge

The original (southern) span of the current bridge was opened on September 25, 1930, as a bascule bridge. Designed by engineer Clarence W. Hudson and architect Carl L. Otto, both of New York City,[3] it is dedicated to George Washington, in honor of his crossing with General Rochambeau. It linked the old Fox Point Boulevard on the Providence side with the intersection of Warren and Taunton Avenues - Watchemoket Square - both of which still terminate at the East Providence end of the bridge. The four-lane bridge, which carries two lanes in each direction, was marked by four approximately 15 ft high by 8 ft wide at the base by 3 ft deep (4.6x2.4x0.9 m) stone monuments, all having identical bronze dedications to Washington on them. The bridge structure itself, with its stone façade and arches under the roadway, is similar to the Arlington Memorial Bridge in Washington, D.C., on a shortened scale.

Signs for Exits 4 and 5, eastbound traffic lane.

In 1959, the span, along with the approach roads, were redesignated as part of the newly created I-195, which, by the end of the year, extended to the Massachusetts border. However, it was determined that future congestion on the bridge was far too much for its future use. In 1968, a second span that mimicked the arches of the original was completed to the north of the original span. Separated by approximately twenty feet (6 m) the two interstate bridges were hemmed into the space afforded. It was at this time that two changes were made to the original bridge; the bascule section was permanently closed, as the new bridges were not designed to include bascule functions. The bridge monuments on the northern side of the bridge on each approach were relocated to the respective sides of the new western approach span, giving the bridge its final appearance.

Construction on the new span was begun in April 1967 and opened shortly before Christmas of 1968.[4]

Unusual design[edit]

The design of the 1960s-era northern (westbound) section was unusual, the result of a compromise between cost and aesthetics.[4] The federal Bureau of Public Roads wanted to build an inexpensive, plain steel bridge next to the more decorative concrete 1930s bridge.[4] Rhode Island Public Works refused to accept a design for the new bridge that didn't harmonize with the existing structure.[4] As a compromise, the decision was made to utilize a new construction technique: "pre-stressed concrete with false arches."[4] This technique of pre-stressed and post-tensioned concrete spans, locked in place with steel anchors, promised the beauty of concrete at the cost of steel.[4] However, this technique never caught on with the industry, and by the 1970s was largely abandoned as a building technique.[4] This meant that the westbound span would remain a relative rarity, a "curiosity of another era;" a fact which would come back to confound engineers a half-century later when the span was discovered to have critical failures.[4] A 2024 report on the bridge suggested that such pre-stressed and post-tensioned concrete structures are poorly understood due to their rarity.[4]

Rehabilition projects[edit]

In 1996, both bridges were repaired. The new bridge had large amounts of its steel understructure replaced, which required some lanes to be closed during the entire project. The old bridge was patched by closing lanes at night, cutting holes in the surface, performing repairs, and opening the lanes for the morning rush.

By the early 2000s, rehabilitation had moved on to the eastbound span. With experience gained from reconstructing the concrete spandrel arch span Ashton Viaduct, RIDOT opted to fully replace the portion of the 1930 bridge carrying vehicles with a new bridge. To avoid issues with obtaining new right of way, the new eastbound span was constructed starting in the gap between the two bridges, with the older bridge having its northernmost arch ribs removed to allow construction to proceed. A new eastbound span opened in 2008. The remaining portion of the original 1930 segment is now used as the pedestrian span. [5] That portion had closed in July 2012, as RIDOT expanded the original infrastructure into a Linear Park.[6] Much of the repair was limited[clarification needed] by RI State budget constraints and other cost issues related to its age and the stress of multi-regional congested traffic traveling eastward to the Seekonk/Fall River suburbs and Cape Cod. Along with the Henderson Bridge located one mile to the north, the Washington Bridge is one of two spans crossing the Seekonk River in Providence.

In the Washington Bridge project,[clarification needed] the eastbound bridge was replaced. This involved building a portion of the new bridge in the gap between the two structures, moving traffic to the new bridge, then demolishing the left lanes of the old bridge to make room for the right lanes of the new one. The old control booths for the bascule section have been removed. The new span is now complete. Part of the original eastbound structure was preserved, and is being used as a bike and pedestrian route.

$25 million in federal funding was allocated in 2020 for a now-estimated $78 million rehabilitation of the westbound structure. The actual repairs were delayed by lawsuits from all the contractors that submitted bids; one contractor was disqualified and the bidding process restarted.[7]

2023-2024: westbound closure[edit]

Westbound I-195 entrance ramp in East Providence closed due to bridge closure
Westbound traffic is re-routed onto the eastbound lanes on I-195 in East Providence, approaching the bridge.

The westbound span of the Washington Bridge was suddenly closed on Monday, December, 11, 2023, after the Rhode Island Department of Transportation announced the discovery of "critical failure of some original bridge components".[8] Westbound traffic was initially detoured on an alternate route through East Providence and onto the newly reopened Henderson Bridge before rejoining with Interstate 195 via the Gano Street exit.

The span had been carrying about 90,000 cars per day.[9] Extreme volume along the detour route slowed typical trips across the river from a few minutes to over an hour; traffic on I-195 backed up into Massachusetts.[10] East Providence schools were forced to indefinitely switch to an early-dismissal schedule, with remote learning only on the Wednesday after the closure.[9] State police were instructed to allow ambulances to cross one lane of the westbound bridge starting Tuesday, to maintain access to local hospitals; Rhode Island Hospital is the only Level-1 trauma center for Rhode Island and southeastern Massachusetts.[9] The "critical failure" was sheared pins noticed several days prior by an engineer working on old eastbound deck demolition for Vanasse Hangen Brustlin, Inc..[10] The pins had been intact as of the last inspection in July 2023, but the newly-discovered damage put the bridge in danger of collapse.[10]

At 1 AM[11] on Friday, December 15, two temporary westbound lanes opened using the eastbound structure, substantially reducing delays[11] but leaving the highway with reduced capacity in both directions,[12] a process that had originally been expected to take two to three weeks.[13] A 500-person ferry was planned to start trips from 6am to 7pm every half hour on Monday, December 18, between India Point and Bristol.[12] RIPTA shuttle buses were planned to bring westbound passengers to bus and train connections at Kennedy Plaza and Providence station, respectively, with a shuttle to a park-and-ride lot in Colt State Park in Bristol.[12]

RIDOT's initial estimate for permanent westbound repairs was three months, depending on weather and other factors.[14] Local TV station WPRI has since reported that it will take longer than three months (but did not report the time estimated to complete work); WPRI also reported that the Bristol-Providence ferry will stop service after January 19, 2024.[15] On March 14, 2024, Rhode Island Governor Dan McKee announced that the structure was not repairable, and would require demolition and complete replacement, a process estimated to take at least two years and cost around $300 million.[1]

George Redman Linear Park[edit]

Bicycle and pedestrian traffic are separated on the George Redman Linear Park (looking east)

From 2012 to 2015, a bicycle and pedestrian park was constructed on a remaining section of the original Washington Bridge.[16] The park opened in September 2015, at a total cost of $21.8 million.[17] The park consists of an 11-foot-wide bicycle lane, a separated footpath paved with stamped concrete, and several seating areas.[17] The path offers scenic overlooks of the Seekonk River and Brown's boathouse.[18] Its design includes decorative granite sections and spires, and its central section contains a plaza-like sitting area with half-circle concrete benches.[18]

The path is completely separated from I-195 automobile traffic and includes two wide bicycle lanes, and a separate wide pedestrian walkway.[18]

The linear park is named George Redman Linear Park, in honor of East Providence cyclist[19] and park activist George Redman,[20] who died in 2012 at age 88.[18] A plaque honoring Redman can be seen on the west end of the park.[18]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b Patrick Anderson; Wheeler Cowperthwaite; Katherine Gregg (March 14, 2024). "Westbound Washington Bridge needs to be demolished. What it means for the state". Providence Journal.
  2. ^ a b Conforti, Joseph (1976). Our Heritage: A History of East Providence. White Plains, New York: Monarch Publishing, Inc. pp. 56–57.
  3. ^ "Historic Highway Bridges of Rhode Island" (PDF). Rhode Island Department of Transportation. p. 69. Retrieved 15 June 2014.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i Anderson, Patrick (14 March 2024). "'You don't see this every day': Why is the Washington Bridge so strange?". Providence, Rhode Island: The Providence Journal. Retrieved 17 March 2024.
  5. ^ "The Space Between". US DOT - Federal Highway Administration. September–October 2004. Retrieved 2023-12-17.
  6. ^ "News & Press Releases - Rhode Island Rhode Island Department of Transportation". Ri.gov. Retrieved 2017-07-27.
  7. ^ Legal battles and delays: Why Washington Bridge repairs have taken so long
  8. ^ Doiron, Sarah (11 December 2023). "RIDOT closes I-195 West at Washington Bridge". WPRI. Retrieved 11 December 2023.
  9. ^ a b c Travis Andersen (December 13, 2023). "'Like the pandemic in reverse': R.I. traffic nightmare from emergency bridge closure drags on as officials detail alternate routes". The Boston Globe.
  10. ^ a b c Amanda Milkovits; Edward Fitzpatrick (December 12, 2023). "Engineer spotted 'concerning issue' 3 days before I-195 westbound bridge closed, R.I. DOT chief says". The Boston Globe.
  11. ^ a b John R. Ellement; Edward Fitzpatrick; Travis Andersen (December 15, 2023). "Traffic improving with two bypass lanes now open on Washington Bridge in Rhode Island". The Boston Globe.
  12. ^ a b c Edward Fitzpatrick (December 15, 2023). "6 key developments in the R.I. bridge closure". The Boston Globe.
  13. ^ "'Critical failure' will result in closure of Westbound lanes of Washington Bridge". The Providence Journal. Retrieved 11 December 2023.
  14. ^ RIDOT announces 195 closure at westbound Washington Bridge
  15. ^ DaSilva, Melanie. "Washington Bridge repairs might take longer than expected". WPRI.com. WPRI/Nexstar. Retrieved January 14, 2024.
  16. ^ "RIDOT to begin Washington Bridge linear park project". RI.GOV. State of Rhode Island. 5 July 2012. Retrieved 22 September 2015.
  17. ^ a b Kuffner, Alex (21 September 2015). "$21.8-million George Redman Linear Park is dedicated to pioneer of R.I. bike paths". The Providence Journal. Retrieved 22 September 2015.
  18. ^ a b c d e Patinkin, Mark (17 March 2024). "A silver lining to the Washington Bridge fiasco? Mark Patinkin has found it". The Providence Journal. Retrieved 17 March 2024.
  19. ^ "Legendary Local Cyclist Inspires Washington Bridge Replacement :: Story ID: 21959". Construction Equipment Guide. 2014-01-15. Retrieved 2017-07-27.
  20. ^ "Washington Bridge Bikeway & Linear Park". Rhode Island Department of Transportation. Archived from the original on 2014-05-14. Retrieved 2014-05-13. When opened, the new linear park will be named the George Redman Linear Park after the late East Providence resident who was instrumental in making the East Bay Bike Path a reality 25 years ago, and who advocated for bike path development across the state.

External links[edit]