New Chain of Rocks Bridge

New Chain of Rocks Bridge
New Chain of Rocks Bridge

New bridge in foreground, old bridge background
Other name(s) I-270 Mississippi River bridge
Carries 4 lanes of I-270
Crosses Mississippi River
Locale Granite City, IL and Bellefontaine Neighbors, MO
Maintained by Illinois Department of Transportation
ID number IL 060-0035
Design Girder
Total length 5,411.4 feet[1]
Width 54.1 feet
Opened September 2, 1966
Daily traffic 56,800[2]
Coordinates 38°45′53″N 90°10′25″W / 38.76472°N 90.17361°W / 38.76472; -90.17361
This article is about the bridge built in 1966 which currently carries I-270 traffic. For the older bridge which now carries pedestrian traffic, see Chain of Rocks Bridge.

The New Chain of Rocks Bridge is a pair of bridges across the Mississippi River on the north edge of St. Louis, Missouri. It was constructed in 1966 to bypass the Chain of Rocks Bridge immediately to the south. It originally carried traffic for Bypass US 66 and currently carries traffic for Interstate 270. The bridge opened to traffic on September 2, 1966.[3]

The original Chain of Rocks Bridge was a narrow bridge with a 22 degree bend midway over the river. Reportedly, two tractor-trailers could not pass each other on that bridge. The Illinois Department of Transportation (IDOT) marks Historic Route 66 over the New Chain of Rocks Bridge (with a "Spur historic route" to the original), but it is only considered a way to make the route continuous.

Contents

History

In 1959, proposals first surfaced of a new bridge just to the north of the existing bridge at Chain of Rocks. One of the major opponents to the proposal was Madison mayor Stephen Maeras,[4] as his city owned the existing Chain of Rocks Bridge that was a toll bridge. The proposed 21 feet above the 1844 high water mark also brought opponents asking the Corps of Engineers to reject the application.[5]

The construction was riddled by various labor and political problems. A death threat to kill a construction supervisor surfaced in July 1965,[6] and by November 1965 the contractor stopped work on the bridge due to the "many troubles".[7] Meanwhile, as the rest of I-270 was open by then, the City of Madison continued to collect toll revenue from the old bridge, averaging $50,000 to $60,000 per month.[8]

The state of Missouri, which was overseeing the construction project, would soon start an investigation as the project was several months behind schedule. The state decided on legal action against the City of Madison in regards to tolls on the old bridge by July 1966,[9] and Madison suspended the tolls on August 2, 1966.[10]

On September 2, 1966 at 1:45 PM (13:45), the bridge was opened to traffic.[11] This moment marked the completion of I-270 in St. Louis (not counting the section that was still marked I-244), and was the first of three interstate highway bridges opened in the St. Louis area.

This opening could not come at a better time for the people in the nearby Alton area, as they were dealing a narrow bridge of their own at the time that had numerous problems and was facing another major closure due to repairs. As a result, any construction work or major accident on either bridge almost always made the Alton Telegraph (with the biggest stories making front page). In 1975, the Clark Bridge closed for major repairs for a six month period, and traffic was detoured onto this bridge. The locals referred it as the I-270 Bridge for many years, to differentiate it from the original Chain of Rocks Bridge.

As the truck traffic from the I-70 corridor increased (I-70 thru truckers preferred the I-270 routing through St. Louis due to lower congestion and shorter distances), the Alton area used the 1975 detour as a rallying point in getting the Clark Bridge replaced. Although planning work was being done, there was no funding for that replacement. Meanwhile, the truck traffic was taking a toll on the Chain of Rocks Bridge over both the Mississippi River and Chain of Rocks Canal. Lane restrictions for expansion joint and pavement repairs on both structures was common during the 1980s and 1990s. The river bridge would soon be rated structurally deficient by 1991.[12]

In 1993, the Mississippi River experienced major flooding during the Great Flood of 1993. North of St. Louis, every bridge between the McKinley Bridge to the Keokuk Bridge was shut down due to flooding at one point or another except for the I-270 bridge, despite the lower than normal clearance over the Mississippi River. Most of the other bridges that closed had flooded approaches, but all the approaches on I-270 was built on high ground (with the Missouri end being on a bluff just past the Riverview exit; the nearby Canal Bridge also played a role) and remained above water. This led to some of the worst traffic delays on the bridge during this time, especially during peak periods at the height of the floods.

On January 4, 1994, the Clark Bridge opened to traffic, giving the Chain of Rocks Bridge much needed relief. During the night of August 10, 1994, two pins supporting an expansion joint failed and caused a section on the Illinois end of the bridge to sink nearly 4 inches, causing 3 of the 4 lanes to close for emergency repairs.[13] For the remainder of that month, various lanes would close due to emergency repairs and inspections and news regarding the emergency repairs frequently made headlines in the Alton Telegraph.

From June 1996 through December 1998, IDOT conducted a major bridge resurfacing project on both the river and canal bridges, with various expansion joints being replaced during this time. IDOT put a 8-6 width and legal weight restriction on the bridge, which forced the majority of trucks to take alternate routes during this time. Traffic would often clog during Friday afternoons while the construction went on. The weight and width restrictions would be lifted after the project concluded.

As traffic demands continue to increase, the lack of shoulders on both the canal and river bridges is starting to prove a safety hazard. The canal bridge would receive a functionally obsolete[14] rating. In addition, with the bridge still being at 4 lanes of traffic, any issue that occurs can cause big problems. On December 8, 2010, a major tractor-trailer accident would close the bridge for 10 hours[15] and paralyze traffic in the Metro-East during the morning peak periods.

Notes

  • Until 1994, locals heavily used this crossing due to the constant problems of the Old Clark Bridge.
  • On August 10, 1994, a broken beam caused the closure of 3 of the 4 lanes on the bridge for a few days. The lanes were reopened on August 14, 1994.
  • In the near future, IDOT wants to replace this span as a part of widening I-270 from 4 lanes to 6 lanes from I-255 to Lilac.[16]
  • The nearby Canal Bridges is doomed as IDOT plans on replacing them.[17]
  • The I-70 Corridor of the Future by FHWA is favoring the I-270 corridor in St. Louis,[18] which includes this bridge.

See also

References

  1. ^ Bridgehunter
  2. ^ St. Louis Post-Dispatch, 26 June 2006.
  3. ^ Alton Telegraph, 3 September 1966.
  4. ^ Alton Evening Telegraph, April 14, 1959
  5. ^ Alton Evening Telegraph, July 1, 1959
  6. ^ Alton Evening Telegraph, July 28, 1965
  7. ^ Alton Evening Telegraph, November 29, 1965
  8. ^ Alton Evening Telegraph, April 25, 1966
  9. ^ Alton Evening Telegraph, July 25, 1966
  10. ^ Alton Evening Telegraph, August 2, 1966
  11. ^ Alton Evening Telegraph, September 3, 1966
  12. ^ FAI 270 over Mississippi River
  13. ^ Alton Telegraph, August 12, 1994
  14. ^ IDOT Bridge Information: Canal Bridge
  15. ^ St. Louis Post Dispatch
  16. ^ Transportation Infrastructure Proposals
  17. ^ IDOT Proposed Canal Bridge Replacement Plans
  18. ^ I-70 Corridor of the Future file 2 of 4

External links


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