Cypress Street Viaduct

Cypress Street Viaduct
Cypress Freeway, Nimitz Freeway
Route information
Maintained by Caltrans
Length: 1.78 mi (2.86 km)
History: 1957-1984 as SR 17, 1984-89 as I880
Major junctions
North end: I80 / I580 in Oakland
South end: Market Street at 7th Street in Oakland
Highway system

The Cypress Street Viaduct, often referred to as the Cypress Structure, was a 1.6 mile long, raised two-tier, multi-lane (four lanes per deck) freeway constructed of reinforced concrete that was originally part of the Nimitz Freeway (State Route 17, and later, Interstate 880) in Oakland, California.

It replaced an earlier single-deck viaduct constructed in the 1930s as one of the approaches to the San Francisco–Oakland Bay Bridge. It was located along Cypress Street between 7th Street and Interstate 80 in the West Oakland neighborhood.

It officially opened to traffic on June 11, 1957 and was in use until the 1989 Loma Prieta earthquake, when much of the upper tier collapsed onto the lower tier, killing 42 people.[1]

Construction

The double-decked viaduct was initially designed in 1949 by the City of Oakland as a way to ease traffic on local streets leading to the Bay Bridge, such as Cypress Street (which was California State Route 17 at the time).

The southernmost portion of the Cypress Street viaduct, which was designed as a central offramp structure exiting at Market Street between Fifth and Sixth Streets to the Eighth Street/Seventh Street on/off ramps, was the first phase of the overall project completed in October, 1955 by contractors Frederickson and Watson at a cost of $1.7 million. Construction on the second phase of the project, the double-decked viaduct portion (which started from Adeline Street in the south to the MacArthur Maze in the north), began in February, 1956 by contractors Grove, Wilson, Shepard and Kruge at a cost of $8.3 million, bringing the total cost of the viaduct project to $10 million. It was California's first double-decked freeway when it officially opened to traffic on June 11, 1957.

Loma Prieta earthquake

On October 17, 1989, the portion of the structure from 16th Street north all the way to the MacArthur Maze collapsed during the 1989 Loma Prieta earthquake, due to ground movement and structural flaws.

The collapsed Cypress Street Viaduct at the Northern end, near the corner of Cypress and 32nd Streets.

When in use, the upper tier was used by southbound traffic, and the lower tier was used by northbound traffic. Some sections of the Cypress Street Viaduct were largely supported by two columns on either side, but some sections were only supported beneath by a single supporting column. The design was unable to survive the earthquake because the upper portions of the exterior columns were not tied by reinforcing to the lower columns, and the columns were not sufficiently ringed to prevent bursting. At the time of its design, such structures were not analyzed as a whole, and it appears that large structure motion contributed to the collapse. It was built on filled land on top of bay clay; filled land is highly susceptible to soil settlement during an earthquake, and bay clay exhibits larger ground motion.

After the earth stopped moving, local residents and workers began crawling into and climbing upon the shattered structure with the goal of rescuing those left alive. Many were saved; some only by amputation of trapped limbs.[2] The collapse of the upper tier onto the lower tier resulted in 42 fatalities—two-thirds of the total quake death toll of 63.[3]

After the viaduct was torn down, Cypress Street was renamed Mandela Parkway, in honor of Nelson Mandela, and a landscaped median strip was planted where the viaduct once stood. Before reconstruction occurred, the viaduct ended at the Eighth Street exit on the southern end, with the two roadways going over Seventh Street, while the southbound exit off the MacArthur Maze onto Cypress Street at 32nd Street remained open to local traffic on the northern end.

Reconstruction around West Oakland

In 1997, the Nimitz Freeway was rerouted to loop around the area using a largely ground-level design with more conventional single-level viaduct. The space was mainly taken from a railroad yard which was relocated. The exit at Eighth Street was eliminated, a southbound exit near Seventh and Union Street and a single northbound and southbound exit at Seventh Street, near the Port of Oakland was constructed also providing access via a frontage road to Grand Avenue and the Oakland Army Base, before a viaduct-type interchange splitting traffic to the Bay Bridge via Grand Avenue and also northbound to the Eastshore Freeway.

During construction of the new section of the Nimitz Freeway, a team of archaeologists made many interesting discoveries about the people who lived in West Oakland in the 19th century.[4]

Due to cost overruns, the costs of the replacement freeway doubled from initial estimates of $650 million to $1.25 billion ($250 million per mile) making the five-mile freeway replacement the most expensive project in the state's history at the time. (It would be subsequently overshadowed by the northbound addition of the Benicia–Martinez Bridge and the Eastern span replacement of the San Francisco–Oakland Bay Bridge.) The cost overruns were mainly due to the opposition to replacing the highway on the site of the one partially destroyed in 1989, having to purchase land and property from Southern Pacific Railroad and Amtrak (moving part of the rail yard, and causing the earthquake-damaged 16th Street Amtrak Station to be closed and replaced with two Amtrak stations in Jack London Square and Emeryville) and the United States Postal Service (having to replace a parking lot with a parking garage), as well as replacing BART support beams and purchasing land from the U.S. Army (the freeway went through the Oakland Army Base to re-route the freeway).

Exit list

Except where prefixed with a letter, postmiles were measured on the road as it was in 1964, based on the alignment that existed at the time, and do not necessarily reflect current mileage. R reflects a realignment in the route since then, M indicates a second realignment, L refers an overlap due to a correction or change, and T indicates postmiles classified as temporary (for a full list of prefixes, see the list of postmile definitions).[5] Segments that remain unconstructed or have been relinquished to local control may be omitted. The entire route was in Oakland, Alameda County.

PostmileDestinationsNotes
 Market Street, Harbor TerminalSouthbound and northbound exit and entrance
 8th Street, Cypress StreetNorthbound exit
 7th Street at Kirkham StreetSouthbound entrance
 14th Street, Downtown OaklandNorthbound entrance and southbound exit
 Cypress Street, Peralta StreetSouthbound exit
 Cypress Street at 32nd StreetNorthbound entrance
  I580 San RafaelNorthbound exit and Southbound entrance
  I80 – San Francisco, Berkeley, SacramentoNorthbound/westbound exit and Southbound/eastbound Entrance
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

Gallery

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Cypress Street Viaduct.

Similar structures damaged by earthquakes

References

  1. "Cypress Viaduct Freeway".
  2. Holler, Scott; Vicki Sheff; Lorenzo Benet; Doris Bacon; Tom Cunneff; Michael Alexander; Kristina Johnson; Robin Micheli; Linda Witt (30 October 1989). "A City Trembled, Its People Held". People 32 (18).
  3. Eberhart-Phillips JE, Saunders TM, Robinson AL, Hatch DL, Parrish RG (June 1994). "Profile of mortality from the 1989 Loma Prieta earthquake using coroner and medical examiner reports". Disasters 18 (2): 160–70. doi:10.1111/j.1467-7717.1994.tb00298.x. PMID 8076160.
  4. "Putting the "There" There: Historical Archaeologies of West Oakland". Retrieved 2007-11-03.
  5. Staff. "State Truck Route List" (XLS FILE). California Department of Transportation. Retrieved March 1, 2015.

External links

Coordinates: 37°49′00″N 122°17′22″W / 37.8168°N 122.2895°W