Skip to main content

VIDEO: Virginia approves Hampton Roads Bridge Tunnel expansion

December 12, 2016
The US state of Virginia has approved a US$4 billion project to expand the Hampton Roads Bridge Tunnel close to the city of Norfolk.

The state has been looking at designs for the past 20 years to improve traffic flow in the area, according to a report in the Virginian-Pilot newspaper. Hampton Roads is a body of water making up one of the world's largest natural harbours. The existing structure is close to the US Navy's Atlantic Fleet home base at Norfolk.

The four-lane Hampton Roads Bridge Tunnel (HRBT) is a 5.6km-long crossing for Interstate 64 and US Route 60. It comprising bridges, trestles, man-made islands and tunnels under the main shipping channels for Hampton Roads harbour in the southeastern Virginia.

The original two-lane structure opened 1957 at a cost of $44 million as a toll facility. Construction on a parallel bridge-tunnel facility began in 1972 at a cost of $95 million and opened in 1976 as a toll-free highway.

The HRBT project, known as Alternative A, was the smallest, cheapest and least environmentally damaging of the four proposals. The project includes adding a third tunnel and expanding nearly 20km of Interstate 64 to six lanes from four. However, only nine residential properties will be expropriated and just more than three hectares of environmentally sensitive wetlands will be affected, the newspaper reported.

Project completion is set for 2024.

The additional lane capacity in each direction would likely be high-occupancy toll lanes – a car with three people would travel toll-free during peak hours. Vehicles with one or two people would pay a variable toll based on congestion during peak hours. Buses also would use the new lanes while existing lanes would remain toll-free.

Another four-lane facility crossing Hampton Roads - the Monitor–Merrimac Memorial Bridge–Tunnel - was completed in 1992 and forms part of the Hampton Roads Beltway, a toll-free network.

Related Content

  • Easing temporary highway danger
    February 22, 2013
    Some of the latest speedometer technology has been successfully trialled in French highway work zones, while tireless work continues across Europe and the United States to reduce the number of work zone deaths and serious injuries involving road workers and motorists. Guy Woodford reports The number of roadworkers being killed and seriously injured on England’s motorways and major trunk roads more than doubled between 2007 and 2010 – from no deaths and 14 serious injuries. This rise has led to to major camp
  • Kazakhstan’s London road show woos consortia for Almaty ring road
    March 2, 2015
    Kazak and EBRD officials visited London to highlight the possibility of a public-private partnership under the country’s revised PPP legal framework. David Arminas reports. To build a road, you go on the road, and that is what Kazakhstan did in London in mid-December. Representatives of more than 100 organisations, a mix of construction companies and financial institutions, attended the roadshow-style presentation to attract foreign capital for BAKAD, the Almaty Ring Road Concession. The message was that Ka
  • Norway mulls new routes across the vast Hardangervidda plateau
    November 2, 2015
    Norway is considering proposals for another route across over the vast Hardangervidda, one of Europe’s largest plateaux and most of which is a national park. The Norwegian Road Administration (Statens Vegvesen) said one proposal would incorporate a 6km tunnel at a cost more than €216 million, according to a report the Nationen newspaper.
  • Sunderland’s New Wear Crossing takes shape
    February 16, 2017
    The New Wear Crossing will be the first bridge to be built over the River Wear in Sunderland, UK, for more than 40 years Raising the bridge’s 100m-tall pylon promised to be a stunning visual sight, but also a tricky operation dictated by extremely variable local weather. World Highways went to press just before the operation, but not before the pylon had arrived by barge on January 7. It had completed a two-day crossing of the often unpredictable North Sea from the Belgian port of Ghent where it was f