Essential Arlington, Va., Bridge to Be Closed for Year-Long Rebuild : CEG

2022-08-13 05:41:50 By : Ms. Michelle Jiang

Mon May 02, 2022 - Northeast Edition WRC-TV News4 & City of Arlington

A complete overhaul is needed on a small bridge just off Interstate 395 in northern Virginia, precipitating the need to shutter the structure to all traffic for more than a year while a complete overhaul is performed.

In an April 26 news release, the city of Arlington announced that the deteriorating West Glebe Road bridge, which straddles the Arlington-Alexandria line, will close to traffic on May 9 and not open again until the summer of 2023.

Crews have slowly blocked off parts of the bridge to traffic as its condition has worsened in recent years, reported WRC-TV News4 in Washington, D.C. Signs have been posted on the short span warning drivers about its weight limitations and the danger in crossing it.

Recently, a huge horizontal crack could be seen along the bottom of the structure.

"Over time, the beams have deteriorated to the point where [they] are crumbling themselves," Arlington County Engineering Bureau Chief Adil Chauhan told News4.

The bridge crosses over the popular Four Mile Run trail, but the plan is to keep the corridor open to pedestrians using a detour.

Arlington County and the cities of Alexandria and Arlington agreed on a design-build method for the project, where a firm is hired to take the design from 30 percent to final before constructing the West Glebe Road bridge. The process includes proposals from artist Vicki Scuri for specific art that enhances the span aesthetically, provide additional lighting on the Four Mile Run trail, and connect the design of the bridge to the surrounding communities.

Last spring, the county board approved a $9.89 million contract, including contingency, to Corman Kokosing Construction Co., to replace the West Glebe Road bridge. The national contracting firm has a local office in Annapolis Junction, Md.

Arlington County engineers said construction of the planned replacement superstructure (road deck and beams) will bring the road crossing back to life. Its original piers, which are stable, will be used to support the new superstructure, thus reducing project costs, construction time and impact on the nearby watershed.

Two vehicle lanes on the renovated bridge are expected to reopen in early 2023, along with one of two widened sidewalks, the city noted.

The current structure over Four Mile Run was built in 1956, but Arlington officials said in their statement that elements of the bridge have crumbled in recent years. In 2018, a 5-ton weight restriction was placed on all user vehicles, and, in March, due to signs of continued structural beam degradation, all southbound traffic was detoured away from the bridge.

The city noted that while allowing motor vehicle traffic on the bridge during construction has been ruled out, pedestrians and bicyclists will still be able to use the West Glebe Road bridge through June, after which they will be directed to a temporary crossing, independent of the superstructure, to be built alongside the bridge.

Car and truck detours are available via the I-395 ramp to Shirlington Circle, and the Mount Vernon Avenue bridge, located further east at the intersection of South Glebe Road.

An artist's rendering of the replacement West Glebe Road bridge. Today's top stories DOT Pauses 'Buy America' Provision to Provide Relief to Already Strained Industry Pennsylvania Contractor Takes Delivery of First Doosan DD100 Dozer Wirtgen Slipform Pavers Bring Numerous Innovations, World Premiere to bauma 2022 Granite Tackles California Congestion Issue With $700M '101 in Motion' Project Blanchard Machinery CEO, President Joe Blanchard Passes at Age 60 Alabama's Bank Independent to Build $60M, Four-Story Muscle Shoals Complex Hitachi's Sam Shelton Retires After 27 Years With Company Former Owner of Highway Equipment Company Dies, 84

An artist's rendering of the replacement West Glebe Road bridge.

DOT Pauses 'Buy America' Provision to Provide Relief to Already Strained Industry

Pennsylvania Contractor Takes Delivery of First Doosan DD100 Dozer

Wirtgen Slipform Pavers Bring Numerous Innovations, World Premiere to bauma 2022

Granite Tackles California Congestion Issue With $700M '101 in Motion' Project

Blanchard Machinery CEO, President Joe Blanchard Passes at Age 60

Alabama's Bank Independent to Build $60M, Four-Story Muscle Shoals Complex

Hitachi's Sam Shelton Retires After 27 Years With Company

Former Owner of Highway Equipment Company Dies, 84

Construction Equipment Guide 470 Maryland Drive Fort Washington, PA 19034 800-523-2200

Construction Equipment Guide covers the nation with its four regional newspapers, offering construction and industry news and information along with new and used construction equipment for sale from dealers in your area. Now we extend those services and information to the internet. Making it as easy as possible to find the news and equipment that you need and want.

Contents Copyrighted 2022, by Construction Equipment Guide, which is a Registered Trademark, registered in the U.S. Patent Office. Registration number 0957323. All rights reserved, nothing may be reprinted or reproduced (including framing) in whole or part without written permission from the publisher. All editorial material, photographs, drawings, letters, and other material will be treated as unconditionally assigned for publication and copyright purposes and are subject to Construction Equipment Guide’s unrestricted right to edit and comment editorially. Contributor articles do not necessarily reflect the policy or opinions of this publication. Read our privacy policy here.