Bridge of Lions

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Bridge of Lions
Bridge of Lions
Official name Bridge of Lions
Carries 2 general purpose lanes and 2 sidewalks
Crosses Matanzas River (Intracoastal Waterway)
Locale St. Augustine, Florida
Maintained by Florida Department of Transportation
ID number 780074
Design steel bascule bridge
Longest span 26.5 meters (87 feet)
Total length 470.9 meters (1545 feet)
Width 10.3 meters (34 feet)
Vertical clearance N/A
Clearance below 7.6 meters (25 feet) closed
Opening date 1927
Maps and aerial photos

The Bridge of Lions is a bascule bridge that spans the Intracoastal Waterway in St. Augustine, Florida. It leads to Anastasia Island. Lions made of marble used to guard the bridge, built in 1926 and 1927 across Matanzas Bay. The lions were removed in February of 2005, and are expected to return about five years from that date. The Department of Transportation declared the bridge "structurally deficient and functionally obsolete" in 1999, prompting heated debates on what to do with the structure. A restoration plan was approved, but opponents continued to voice their opposition.

A new "temporary" bridge has been constructed adjacent to the original "bridge of lions", and as of May 18, 2006, traffic started using this temporary bridge while the original bridge is being rehabilitated and reconstructed to look like its predecessor.[1] After nearly 80 years of service, an official closing ceremony for the original Bridge of Lions was held on May 26, 2006.

Several components of the original bridge are either being rehabilitated or returned (as lost components) to the rehabilitated bridge. Primarily, the exterior or fascia steel girders are being rehabiliated along with the bascule tower piers. Once the rehabiliation of the original bridge is completed, at a total project cost of 77 million dollars, the temporary bridge will be removed and used as part of an artificial reef just offshore.[citation needed]

[edit] References

  • Florida, DK Eyewitness Travel Guides, 2004, pg. 197
  • staugustine.com - [2]

FDOT, Bridge of Lions Rehab Project - http://www.fdotbridgeoflions.com/