West Seattle Bridge

Coordinates: 47°34′16″N 122°21′00″W / 47.57111°N 122.35000°W / 47.57111; -122.35000
Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

West Seattle Bridge
Duwamish Waterway
LocaleSeattle, Washington
Other name(s)Jeanette Williams Memorial Bridge
Characteristics
Designsegmental, cantilever
Total length2,607 ft (795 m)[1]
Clearance below140 ft (43 m)
History
DesignerAndersen Bjornstad Kane Jacobs, Inc.[2]
OpenedJuly 14, 1984[3]
Rebuilt2020–2022
Location
Map

The West Seattle Bridge, officially the Jeanette Williams Memorial Bridge, is a

being struck by the freighter
Antonio Chavez in 1978.

The high-level bridge was closed in March 2020 after cracks in the underside were found to be growing rapidly, necessitating a major repair amid the COVID-19 pandemic. The Seattle Department of Transportation conducted repairs over a two-and-a-half-year period and reopened the bridge on September 17, 2022.

Construction

The bridge spans the east and west channels that form the mouth of the Duwamish River at Elliott Bay, crossing over Harbor Island. Its main approaches are Fauntleroy Way S.W. from the west and the Spokane Street Viaduct from the east. Drivers heading east over the West Seattle Bridge can continue (via the Spokane Street Viaduct) east to Interstate 5 at Columbian Way (exit 163), forming a three-mile (5 km) arterial between West Seattle and Interstate 5 (which comprises a road formerly known as the "West Seattle Freeway"). The navigational clearance height of the high-level West Seattle Bridge is 140 feet (43 meters).[4]

The low-level Spokane Street Bridge of swing-span design spans the west channel of the Duwamish River immediately north of the high-level bridge. The low-level bridge carries the surface-level Spokane Street and has a navigational clearance of 45 feet (14 meters).

History

Spokane Street has long been used as designation for the streets running along the latitude of the current West Seattle Bridge.[5] Construction on the "West Spokane Street Bridge" (a bascule drawbridge) was completed in 1924, and the bridge lasted over fifty years. Then (in 1978) the portion of the bridge carrying the westbound lanes of the bridge was rammed by the Chavez. The bridge formerly carrying the eastbound lanes remained open until 1984, at which point the high-level bridge (the "West Seattle Bridge") was opened. The low-level bascule bridge remained open until 1991, when the "Spokane Street Bridge" (a swing bridge) was opened.

West Spokane Street Bridge (1924-1984)

Traffic on the West Spokane Street Bridge in 1930

The bridge that preceded the "West Seattle Bridge" as we know it today was called the "West Spokane Street Bridge".[6] Before any permanent bridge was built along the line of Spokane Street, there had been three temporary bridges, built c. 1900, c. 1910, and c. 1918. The first one was basically a swinging gate in what had been primarily built as a water main; the second was a swing bridge that also carried a water main, and the third was a swing bridge after the water main had been rerouted elsewhere.[7]

A more permanent

U.S. Route 99 in Washington
.

By the 1970s, the West Spokane Street Bridge was one of Seattle's worst bottlenecks, due to the large number of ships in Duwamish Waterway and the frequent bridge openings. City leaders began planning a higher bridge, without a drawbridge, in the 1960s.

Replacement bridge project

Planning for the bridge was hampered by difficulties in receiving funding. In large part, this is because the bridge was not a designated highway. A 1968 Forward Thrust ballot measure included $16.7 million in funding for the bridge, largely to receive votes from West Seattle residents. Other funding sources included a state program for funding urban streets and money from a maintenance fund.

The Antonio Chavez, the ship that hit the West Spokane Street Bridge in 1978.

After a

bribes
involving the head of the House Transportation Committee, the city engineer and others. Despite the 68 percent support in the 1968 ballot measure, the state withdrew its urban streets money due to the scandal. In 1976 and 1977, the conspirators were placed on trial and imprisoned.

After the scandal, the project was considered dead. Norbert Tiemann, a federal highway regulator, stated that there would essentially be no chance of the project receiving federal funds for completion. Tiemann also quipped, "Short of a tug knocking it down (which could trigger federal special bridge replacement funds), there is nothing else. And you certainly wouldn't want to go that route."[8] In March 1978, several prominent West Seattle residents filed a petition to organize a secession referendum, with the hopes of finding state funding for a new bridge to serve their independent city.[9] The secession campaign was required to gather 29,000 signatures for a ballot measure, but were unable to meet the threshold before the northern or westbound drawbridge was permanently closed[10] and all east–west traffic was funneled over the southern span.[9][11]

1978 closure