This is another bridge that was designed by the engineering firm Modjeski and Masters.
Street View, Apr 2019 |
The upper deck has yet to be completed.
1963 view via BridgeHunter, License: Creative Commons Attribution-Share-Alike (CC BY-SA) |
Street View, Sep 2021 |
BrentSpenceBridgeCorridor The bridge was designed to carry 80-100,000 vehicles per day. It currently carries twice that volume. The bridge was reconfigured in 1985 to provide an additional travel lane on each deck. -- Before: three 12-feet lanes + approximately five-feet shoulders -- Now: four 11-feet lanes + one-foot shoulders |
TrafficAndConceptAnalysis, p17 |
Please click Sherman's link and scroll down for some details about the tortured history concerning the capacity improvement plans.
1 of 3 photos posted by Bridges & Tunnels with Sherman Cahal The Brent Spence Bridge is looking better than ever after a routine painting and maintenance project was completed last year. This double-deck crossing carries Interstates 71 and 75 across the Ohio River between Covington, Kentucky, and Cincinnati, Ohio. ➵ Check out more photos and history of the Brent Spence Bridge at http://bridgestunnels.com/location/brent-spence-bridge/ |
I skipped to the chase concerning the documents and found:
2022 Report, p16 |
So after decades of consuming taxpayer's money for planning, they still don't have an Interstate Cooperative Agreement written.
Apr 2023:
Given the line "WORKING TOGETHER TO IMPROVE THE BRENT SPENCE BRIDGE CORRIDOR" on this website, I presume they finally signed an agreement.
I learned about this project because the design of the new Western Hills Viaduct interchange with I-75 has to coordinate with this project.
14:54 video |
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