Skip to main content

Cianbro picks up another contract for Washington’s Memorial Bridge

The 1930’s Arlington Memorial Bridge in Washington, which has carried US presidents and military heroes across the Potomac River to the famous Arlington Cemetery, is to undergo refurbishment, again. Cianbro Corporation, based in the state of Maine and which worked on the bridge in 2013, picked up the contract for US$2,523,520, according to a notice on the FedBizOpps.gov website. The Federal Business Opportunities website had earlier this year asked for submissions for the work: “The project will be sp
July 15, 2015 Read time: 3 mins
Courtesy of National Park Service
The 1930’s Arlington Memorial Bridge in Washington, which has carried US presidents and military heroes across the Potomac River to the famous Arlington Cemetery, is to undergo refurbishment, again.

Cianbro Corporation, based in the state of Maine and which worked on the bridge in 2013, picked up the contract for US$2,523,520, according to a notice on the FedBizOpps.gov website.

The Federal Business Opportunities website had earlier this year asked for submissions for the work: “The project will be split into multiple work schedules/contract options, with the cost of the entire project expected to fall within the price range of $2,000,000 to $5,000,000.”

Earlier this year, the bridge’s owner, the National Park Service, closed two lanes and imposed a weight limit on vehicles pending emergency repairs.

The service says on its website that the bridge was first proposed in 1886 but wasn’t built until 1932. “Today, Memorial Bridge symbolically links North and South in its alignment between the Lincoln Memorial and Arlington House, the Robert E. Lee Memorial.”

In April, the Washington, D.C.-based American Road and Transportation Builders Association (ARTBA) identified the Memorial Bridge as one of more than 61,000 “structurally deficient bridges” in the country but also one of the most significant because of its location.

ARTBA said on its website this month that the latest work will include repair and replacement of structural concrete, steel and timber members. Also included will be installation of additional elastomeric bearing pads, expansion joint repair or replacement, debris removal from bascule span truss members, trunnion posts and the bottom of the trunnion areas. There will be concrete sidewalk repairs, drainage improvements and an ultra-thin bonded asphalt overlay.

Work is expected to continue into next year on the bridge which carries around 55,000 people daily.

A recent report by the Washington Post newspaper reported that the 10ton load limit across the entire length of the bridge “essentially eliminates most bus traffic on the granite-faced, arching landmark”.

The bridge’s condition was embarrassing, the Post noted. “Although tens of thousands of U.S. bridges have been deemed structurally deficient, the functional mess and potent symbolism of a crumbling Memorial Bridge needing emergency repairs had the Washington region’s congressional representatives fuming.”

The Cianbro appointment is the first step in a possible $250 million multiyear repair project that could close the bridge for up to three months, the Post reported.

The structure is a masonry, steel and stone arch bridge with a central bascule. But, as the Post pointed out in April, “the main lever in the Memorial Bridge control room hasn’t opened the draw span in more than 50 years”.

ARTBA, which this year analysed the US Department of Transport’s National Bridge Inventory database, said more than more than 61,000 structurally deficient bridges remain in need of significant repair.

While structurally deficient bridges may not be imminently unsafe, ARTBA said that signs should be posted so the public understands they have structural deficiencies that need repair.

Related Content

  • Funding the future for road development
    May 11, 2018
    Once again the spectre of future road funding has raised its ugly head. The US administration has announced plans for a massive redevelopment programme for its crumbling infrastructure network. However, as the American Road Transportation Builders Association (ARTBA) has so succinctly pointed out in a recent report, how to pay for the work has yet to be established. This has been backed up by US transport expert Robert Poole of the Reason Foundation, as he recently commented, “…the way we fund and manage th
  • Colorado river bridge relieves congestion
    February 7, 2012
    Built in the shadow of the Hoover Dam, a new bridge is set to takes its place as another major tourist attraction. Patrick Smith reports
  • Almost gone: Canada’s old Port Mann Bridge deconstructed
    August 14, 2015
    Three years ago a welder’s cut halved Canada’s old Port Mann Bridge. David Arminas reports from the banks of the Fraser River. By the time this issue of World Highways reaches you, one of Canada’s iconic steel arch bridges will be a shadow of its former self. It’s been a three-year demolition job since the first cut across the deck of the old Port Mann Bridge just outside the city of Vancouver on Canada’s Pacific coast. A new 10-lane 2.2km Port Mann Bridge opened in 2012 (see box). It runs parallel to the o
  • VIDEO: A little rain never hurt anyone and my car can take it
    June 10, 2016
    It wasn’t some city located in the globe’s tropical regions where rainfall is measured in metres each year. It was the northern European metropolis of London. This past week rain hammered down onto the fair city and immediate surroundings, creating flash floods that made driving in some areas very dangerous. But some drivers refused to be deterred from taking to their favourite road. A little rain wasn’t going to stop them – even if it amounted to a month’s rain, 35mm, in only several hours. It bei