East Huntington Bridge

East Huntington Bridge
Other name(s) East End Bridge, 31st St Bridge, Frank Gatski Memorial Bridge (official name)
Carries 2 lanes of WV 106 / OH 775
Crosses Ohio River
Locale Huntington, West Virginia and Proctorville, Ohio
Design Cable-stayed bridge
Width 12.20 meters
Longest span 274.32 meters
Opened August 1985

The East Huntington Bridge (officially the Frank Gatski Memorial Bridge, also called the East End Bridge or the 31st Street Bridge) is a 900-foot (270 m) cable-stayed bridge crossing the Ohio River at Huntington, West Virginia. It carries WV 106 on the West Virginia approach and OH 775 on the Ohio approach.

Contents

History

The history of the span dates to the early 1970s when possible routings for a future Ohio River span were being discussed. To conform to the Huntington city comprehensive plan, the alignment preferred by the city was one that connected to Interstate 64 outside of the city boundaries. Many favored a plan about one mile north of the city along WV 2.

Work began on the bridge in 1983 and was completed in August 1985 at a cost of $38 million. The designer of the bridge was Arvid Grant and Associated of Olympia, Washington and was the first bridge of its type in West Virginia. It was only the second of its kind in the United States since it utilized concrete instead of steel for its construction. It was built as a FHWA demonstration project.

The Ohio River span and approach ramps on both sides of the river completed was what was known as Phase I. Future plans involved tolling the bridge and connecting it to U.S. Highway 60 four blocks east [1]

The bridge was renamed for Marshall University's first member of the Pro Football Hall of Fame, Frank "Gunner" Gatski, during halftime of the Marshall-UTEP Football game on November 18, 2006.[2]

Gallery

See also

External links

References

  1. ^ East Huntington Bridge. Rendering. 1971. West Virginia Department of Highways.
  2. ^ "Frank ‘Gunner’ Gatski Memorial Bridge to be dedicated at UTEP-Marshall game." 17 Nov. 2006. Herald-Dispatch [Huntington]. 04 Dec. 2006 [1].