Everything about Francis Scott Key Bridge Baltimore totally explained
» Not to be confused with the Francis Scott Key Bridge (Washington)
The
Francis Scott Key Bridge, also known as the Outer Harbor Bridge or simply the Key Bridge, is a
continuous truss bridge spanning the
Patapsco River in
Maryland,
USA.
The bridge was opened in March
1977 and is named for the author of the
Star Spangled Banner,
Francis Scott Key. The bridge is the outermost of three toll crossings of
Baltimore’s Harbor. Upon completion, the bridge structure and its approaches became the final links in
Interstate 695, also known as the Baltimore Beltway.
The span is 1,200 feet long and is four lanes wide. This bridge is a designated hazardous materials truck route (as HAZMATs are prohibited in the two tunnels).
The Key Bridge is a toll facility operated by the
Maryland Transportation Authority. The current toll rate for cars is $2.00. The bridge is also part of the
E-ZPass system, and includes two dedicated E-ZPass lanes in its toll plaza in both the northbound and southbound directions.
Background
In the
1960s Maryland Transportation Authority, concluded there was a need for a second harbor crossing and began planning a single-tube
tunnel under the Patapsco River, downstream from the
Harbor Tunnel. The proposed site was between Hawkins Point and Sollers Point. Plans also were underway for a
drawbridge over
Curtis Creek to connect Hawkins Point to Sollers Point.
Contractors took borings of the harbor bottom in the spring of
1969. Bids for construction of the proposed tunnel were opened on
July 30,
1970, but price proposals were substantially higher than the engineering estimates. Officials drafted alternative plans, including the concept of a four-lane
bridge.
The bridge, at an estimated cost of $110 (
USD) million, represented the best alternative because it allowed for more traffic lanes and carried lower operating and maintenance costs than a tunnel. In addition, a bridge would provide a route across the Baltimore Harbor for vehicles transporting hazardous materials (these materials are prohibited from both the
Baltimore Harbor and
Fort McHenry tunnels).
Construction began in 1972, and the bridge opened to traffic on
March 23,
1977. Including its connecting approaches, the bridge project is 10.9 miles (17.5 km) in length. Other structures along the thruway include a 0.64-mile (1.03 km) dual-span drawbridge over Curtis Creek and two 0.74-mile (1.19 km) parallel bridge structures that carry traffic over Bear Creek, near the former
Bethlehem Steel Sparrows Point plant, this portion of the project not being fully complete until the late
1990s.
Located in an area rich with American history, scholars believe the span crosses within 100 yards (100 m) of the site, marked in the water off the bridge by a stars and striped painted buoy, where Francis Scott Key witnessed the bombardment of
Fort McHenry on the evening of
September 12,
1814. That battle inspired Key to write the words of the Star Spangled Banner. Located just southeast of the bridge are the ruins of
Fort Carroll.
There is another bridge called the
Francis Scott Key Bridge, located in
Washington, DC. It crosses the
Potomac River, and links the District to
Arlington, Virginia.
Fast facts
- Construction Dates: 1972 - March 1977
- Cost: US$60.3 million
- Annual Traffic: 11.5 million vehicles
Sources: Maryland Transportation Authority
Trivia
Appears on the HBO drama series The Wire.
In Liberty Heights, the bridge appears in the background in a brief shot, although anachronistically (the plot is set in 1954 and the bridge wasn't built until 1972-77).
Further Information
Get more info on 'Francis Scott Key Bridge Baltimore'.
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