San Diego – Coronado Bridge

San Diego-Coronado Bridge
Carries 5 lanes of SR 75
Crosses San Diego Bay
Locale San Diego and Coronado, California
Design Prestressed concrete/steel bridge
Total length 11,179 feet (3,407 m) or 2.1 miles (3.4 km)
Longest span 1,880 feet (573 m)
Clearance below 200 feet (61 m)
Construction cost $47.6 million USD
Opened August 3, 1969

The San Diego-Coronado Bridge, locally referred to as the Coronado Bridge, is a "prestressed concrete/steel" girder bridge, crossing over San Diego Bay in the United States, linking San Diego with Coronado, California.[1] The bridge is signed as part of State Route 75.

Contents

Description

The 11,179-foot-long (3,407 m or 2.1 mi) bridge ascends from Coronado at a 4.67 percent grade before curving 80 degrees toward San Diego. The span reaches a maximum height of 200 feet (61m), allowing the U.S. Navy ships which operate out of the nearby Naval Station San Diego to pass underneath it. The five-lane bridge featured the longest box girder in the world until it was surpassed by a bridge in Chongqing, China in 2008.[2] The bridge doesn't form a direct path to Coronado, but rather has a curve. This was done so it would be high enough for all U.S. Navy ships to pass underneath but not too steep for vehicles to ascend and descend.

The San Diego-Coronado Bay Bridge construction started in February 1967, and the bridge was opened to traffic on August 3, 1969, during the celebration of the 200th anniversary of the founding of San Diego[3] Originally, the toll was $0.60 in each direction. Several years later, this was changed to a $1 toll collected for traffic going westbound to Coronado only. Although the bridge was supposed to become "toll-free" once the original bridge bond was paid (which occurred in 1986), the tolls continued for sixteen additional years. On June 27, 2002, it became the last toll bridge in Southern California to discontinue tolls, despite objections from some residents that traffic to the island would increase.[4][5] The original toll booths on the Coronado side remained intact for a short while, and were temporarily replaced with newer, more modern-looking toll booths for the filming of a car commercial in April 2007. The islands upon which the toll booths sat, as well as the canopy over the toll plaza area, are still intact, located at the western end of the bridge in the westbound lanes. Though tolls are no longer collected, beginning February 19, 2009 there was talk of resuming westbound toll collection to fund major traffic solutions and a tunnel.[6]

The bridge contains five lanes: two eastbound, two westbound, and a reversible middle lane with a moveable barrier system which can be used to create a third lane in either direction in response to traffic volume.[3] The eastern end of the bridge connects directly to a T interchange with Interstate 5, just southeast of downtown San Diego. It is designated and signed as part of California State Highway 75. The bridge was designed entirely and exclusively for motor vehicle traffic; there are no pedestrian walkways, bike paths, or shoulders ("breakdown lanes"). Beginning in 2008, cyclists have the once-a-year opportunity to ride over the bridge in the Bike the Bay "fun ride".[7]

The pillars supporting the bridge on the eastern end are painted with huge murals as part of Chicano Park, the largest collection of Chicano art murals in the world.[8] This neighborhood park and mural display were created in response to a community uprising in 1970, which protested the negative effects of the bridge and Interstate 5 on the Barrio Logan community. Local artist Salvador Torres proposed using the bridge and freeway pillars as a giant canvas for Chicano art at a time when urban wall murals were rare in the United States, and he and many other artists created the murals when permission for the park was finally granted in 1973.

It is the third deadliest suicide bridge in the USA, trailing only the Golden Gate Bridge in San Francisco and the Aurora Bridge in Seattle.[9] Between 1972 and 2000, more than 200 suicides occurred on the bridge.[10] Signs have been placed on the bridge urging potential suicides to call a hotline.

General facts

Selected Photos

A daytime panorama of the bridge.
A night time panorama of the bridge.

References

  1. ^ http://www.dot.ca.gov/hq/tsip/hseb/products/Named_Freeways.pdf
  2. ^ American Segmental Bridge Institute
  3. ^ a b "San Diego-Coronado Bridge". California Department of Transportation. February 26, 1999. http://www.dot.ca.gov/hq/esc/tollbridge/Coronado/Corofacts.html. Retrieved April 23, 2011. 
  4. ^ "Frequent Questions", Coronado Visitor Center. Retrieved on December 18, 2009.
  5. ^ http://www.10news.com/news/1464126/detail.html
  6. ^ "San Diego Union Tribune, Feb. 19, 2009". .signonsandiego.com. http://www3.signonsandiego.com/stories/2009/feb/19/panel-discuss-return-coronado-bridge-tolls/?zIndex=55357. Retrieved 2011-08-21. 
  7. ^ Bike the Bay webpage
  8. ^ Kevin Delgado (Winter 1998). "A Turning Point: The Conception and Realization of Chicano Park". Journal of San Diego History. http://www.sandiegohistory.org/journal/98winter/chicano.htm. Retrieved April 23, 2011. 
  9. ^ "St. Petersburg Times". Sptimes.com. 1999-07-17. http://www.sptimes.com/News/71799/TampaBay/Bridge_phones_offer_a.shtml. Retrieved 2011-08-21. 
  10. ^ San Diego Reader

External links