Skip to main content

Environmentally friendly demolition of famous US Bay Bridge to take years

While the new eastern span of northern California’s Bay Bridge between San Francisco and Oakland will open to traffic this September, the task of taking down the old eastern bridge span roadway is likely to take years. Speaking to a local TV station Brad McCrea, regulatory director of the Bay Conservation and Development Commission, the state agency that oversees protection of the Bay Area, said: “Taking the old Bay Bridge [eastern span roadway] down is as practically as big a project as putting the new one
March 18, 2013 Read time: 2 mins
While the new eastern span of northern California’s Bay Bridge between San Francisco and Oakland will open to traffic this September, the task of taking down the old eastern bridge span roadway is likely to take years.

Speaking to local TV station KPIX 5 Brad McCrea, regulatory director of the Bay Conservation and Development Commission, the state agency that oversees protection of the Bay Area, said: “Taking the old Bay Bridge [eastern span roadway] down is as practically as big a project as putting the new one up.”

Environmental restrictions mean the existing structure will have to be carefully taken apart in sections, in the reverse order that it was originally built.

“They have great documentation about how this old structure was built in the 1930s. So they will use the architectural drawings from the 30s, they’ll use all of the photographs they have from the 30s, and they’ll use that as a road map to un-doing what was done 75 years ago,” explained McCrea in his TV interview.

The new eastern span of the Bay Bridge, a near 3km long continuation of the Bay Bridge crossing, will run on from a small island in the middle of the bay where the two suspension bridges of the western half make landfall. The route passes through this Yerba Buena Island, in a short tunnel.  A new single-span single-tower suspension bridge, with a 385m main span, is the centrepiece of the new eastern Bay Bridge span. It will cross the main east side shipping channel close to Yerba and its adjoining Treasure Island naval base, carrying five lanes of traffic each way. The road continues on the long curving Skyway concrete viaduct for the following 2.1km. A final touch down section takes motorists on to Oakland.

The US$6.3 billion renewal of the eastern Bay Bridge is seen as a long-term solution to renowned seismic activity in the area.

Related Content

  • New Zealand's bridges survive earthquake
    February 7, 2012
    How is it that New Zealand's recent large and destructive earthquake did so little damage to the bridges in the quake zone? Mary Searle investigates. The magnitude 7.1 earthquake that hit the Canterbury region in New Zealand at 4.35am on Saturday, 4 September was similar in size to the quake that shook Haiti in January. However, the damage in Canterbury was minimal in comparison. A key contributor to this was New Zealand's preparedness for such an event. Positioned on a major fault line, New Zealand has ear
  • Building Spain's highest viaduct
    July 9, 2012
    Amid a mountain wilderness, a new highway system rises, featuring Spain's highest viaduct For years, motorists and truck drivers in northern Spain have had to endure using a dangerous road liable to traffic hold-ups, delays and accidents, and frequently impassable in the depths of winter. In any event it is a slow and tortuous climb from Molledo on the Cantabrian lowlands up the N-611 road through the Cantabrian Mountains to Palencia, on the Meseta, Spain's high central plateau.
  • Highly relevant: Denmark’s asset management for bridges
    July 12, 2019
    A well-maintained road bridge network is vital to Denmark’s economy. David Arminas caught up with Niels Pedersen, head of bridges at the Danish Road Directorate Denmark, being a country mainly of islands, relies on its bridges and tunnels to help unify the nation culturally. It also means that they are vastly more important to the economic well-being of the nation than in most other states. The World Bank has classified Denmark as a high-income economy. In 2017 it ranked 16th globally in terms of gros
  • PPRS: the positive side of structural failures
    March 27, 2018
    You learn from your failures, not your successes. That was the overall message for delegates during the day-two morning session on the impact of engineering structural failures. These lessons are also too often “painful”, said Anne-Marie Leclerq, deputy minister for infrastructure within the ministry of transport for the Canadian province of Quebec. On September 30, 2006, a span of the six-lane Concorde Bridge in Laval, near Montreal, collapsed crushing to death five people and injuring six. Only recently