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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Description  





2 Accidents  



2.1  Tugboat collision  





2.2  Hurricane Katrina  





2.3  Crossing gates malfunction  







3 References  














Claiborne Avenue Bridge







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Coordinates: 29°5809N 90°0133W / 29.969096°N 90.025734°W / 29.969096; -90.025734
 

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 


Claiborne Avenue Bridge
Claiborne Avenue Bridge in raised position
Coordinates29°58′09N 90°01′33W / 29.969096°N 90.025734°W / 29.969096; -90.025734
Carries LA 39 (Claiborne Avenue)
CrossesIndustrial Canal
LocaleNew Orleans, Louisiana
Official nameJudge William Seeber Bridge
Characteristics
Designvertical-lift bridge
Longest span360 feet (110 m)
History
Opened1957
Location
Map

The Claiborne Avenue Bridge, officially known as the Judge William Seeber Bridge, is a vertical lift bridgeinNew Orleans, Louisiana over the Industrial Canal. It was built by the Louisiana Department of Highways (later renamed the Department of Transportation and Development) and opened to vehicular traffic in 1957. The bridge has suffered numerous disasters: A barge hit the bridge in 1993, Hurricane Katrina damaged it in 2005, and a car plunged into the canal in 2008 due to a malfunction.

Description

[edit]
The Claiborne Avenue Bridge in lowered (vehicle traffic) position

The bridge carries four vehicular lanes, two in each direction, of North Claiborne Avenue, which here is also Louisiana Highway 39. It accommodates most marine traffic in the down position. The bridge is located in the 9th Ward of New Orleans, with the Upper 9th Ward on the western side and the Lower 9th Ward on the eastern or "lower" (down river) side. Along with St. Claude Avenue, it is one of the main links of New Orleans with the communities in St. Bernard Parish, Louisiana such as Arabi and Chalmette. Many locals who regularly use the bridge are unaware of the bridge's official name.

Vertical clearance of waterway when down: 40'Ft. ? Vertical clearance of waterway when raised: ?

Accidents

[edit]

Tugboat collision

[edit]

On May 28, 1993, the tugboat Chris was pushing an empty barge through the canal toward the Mississippi River locks. As was common at the time, the tugboat captain would have to wait to enter the locks, and he was directed to the side of the canal to ground his barge to keep the waterway clear. However, at 3:30 p. m., the barge collided with a support pier of the bridge, causing a 145-foot (44 m) section of the bridge to collapse onto the western canal bank and onto the barge.[1] Two automobiles plummeted off of the bridge, killing one person and severely injuring two others. The waterway was closed to navigation for 2 days, and the bridge was closed for 2 months while the collapsed span was rebuilt. The concrete debris from the collapsed span was used to protect the new support pier from future collisions.

Hurricane Katrina

[edit]

In 2005 Hurricane Katrina severely affected the areas on both sides of the bridge (see Effect of Hurricane Katrina on New Orleans), with the most extreme devastation on the Lower 9th Ward side. The bridge was out of service for months, left in the up position to accommodate Canal shipping, until it was restored to service in early 2006.

Crossing gates malfunction

[edit]

On May 20, 2008, 17-year veteran New Orleans Police Officer Tommie Felix was killed when his vehicle drove off the bridge and plunged into the canal while the bridge was in the raised position. Eyewitness accounts say that the gates which come down to indicate the bridge's closure were not functioning at the time, and several other cars came close to driving off the bridge but stopped short.[2]

Aerial view of the Industrial Canal and Claiborne Avenue Bridge

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Safety Recommendation" (PDF).
  • ^ Laura Maggi (May 20, 2008). "NOPD officer killed after car careened from open Industrial Canal drawbridge". Nola. Retrieved December 10, 2012.

  • Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Claiborne_Avenue_Bridge&oldid=1219273191"

    Categories: 
    Bridges in New Orleans
    Road bridges in Louisiana
    Vertical lift bridges in Louisiana
    Lower 9th Ward, New Orleans
    Bridges completed in 1957
    Bridge disasters in the United States
    Bridge disasters caused by collision
    Bridge disasters caused by maintenance error
    Bridge disasters caused by tropical cyclones
    Bridge disasters involving open moveable bridges
    Transportation disasters in Louisiana
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    This page was last edited on 16 April 2024, at 19:14 (UTC).

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