MassDOT Unveils Early Plan to Replace New Bedford-Fairhaven Bridge

The new bridge would take less time to open and close for boat traffic than its 120-year-old predecessor, but a preliminary design revealed last week has left many uninspired

A rendering of the new bridge would replace the 120-year-old bridge connecting New Bedford and Fairhaven.
A rendering of the new bridge would replace the 120-year-old bridge connecting New Bedford and Fairhaven.
MassDOT
Share
A rendering of the new bridge would replace the 120-year-old bridge connecting New Bedford and Fairhaven.
A rendering of the new bridge would replace the 120-year-old bridge connecting New Bedford and Fairhaven.
MassDOT
MassDOT Unveils Early Plan to Replace New Bedford-Fairhaven Bridge
Copy

During the day, traffic on the New Bedford-Fairhaven bridge comes to a halt once an hour.

The 120-year-old steel bridge slowly spins 90 degrees until it’s perpendicular to the road, opening up a pair of narrow channels on both sides for fishing boats and barges to squeeze through.

Cars don’t start moving again until the bridge groans back into place. The whole process stops traffic for an average of about 12 to 23 minutes depending on how many boats are steaming by, according to a recent navigational study submitted to the Coast Guard.

The Massachusetts Department of Transportation is now developing a detailed proposal for a bridge replacement before legislators go back to the governor to ask her to issue the bond.

Last Thursday, MassDOT officials presented a bare bones rendering of the type of bridge they want to build. A pair of new steel towers would essentially lift a stretch of road up like an elevator. The new vertical lift bridge would open faster than the current swing bridge and create a navigational channel that’s twice as wide, enabling boats to pass through faster and traffic to get moving sooner.

This story was reported by The Public’s Radio. You can read the entire story here.

“Growth and innovation is the shape of the tradition that I’m a part of, and it asks that of me constantly”
We highlight a few of the many events happening across the Community Libraries of Providence – from a bilingual theater workshop to your chance to make a giant cyanotype image from vintage Apollo mission moon photographs. Plus: the Smith Hill block party
Health officials say an East Providence mosquito tested positive for West Nile Virus, urging residents to use repellent and eliminate standing water as mosquito season ramps up.
Rhode Island Attorney General Peter Neronha says new funding plans aim to resolve a multimillion-dollar gap and secure the future of the long-struggling CharterCARE hospitals
The Woonsocket-based health care giant reported $98.9 billion in revenue, boosted by higher prescription volume and a 39% jump in health insurance income, sending shares up 8% in premarket trading