Fulton Road Bridge
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The Fulton Road Bridge was the name of two bridges in
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, the original and its replacement. The bridge in the
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neighborhood spans the
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, Big Creek (a
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tributary that runs through the
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' Brookside Reservation), John Nagy Boulevard, and Norfolk Southern and
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railroad tracks.


The original Fulton Road Bridge

The original bridge, constructed in 1932 and dedicated in mid-May of that year, was initially six lanes. Two lanes were later removed, making it into a four-lane bridge. Several years prior to demolition, two more lanes were closed to traffic, but not taken down. The bridge was then two lanes, with two more blocked off, and with a sidewalk on each side. In 1997, three metal canopies were installed under the roadway to prevent debris from falling from the deteriorating bridge onto zoo patrons. The bridge was closed on October 5, 2006, and demolished in 2007. The new bridge, which includes arch- or Y-styled supports and appears similar to the original, opened on July 9, 2010.


Demolition

Before the demolition occurred, the bridge had gone through some deconstruction, mainly of the deck. This was required due to the discovery, in November 2006, of tiles used as waterproofing under the deck which contained
asbestos Asbestos () is a naturally occurring fibrous silicate mineral. There are six types, all of which are composed of long and thin fibrous crystals, each fibre being composed of many microscopic "fibrils" that can be released into the atmosphere b ...
. These tiles had to be removed by a subcontractor before demolition could proceed. Also prior to the implosion, a major 42” water transmission main, crossing twice underneath the old bridge, was covered by over 1,200 old tires, designed to absorb the shock of the falling bridge deck and protect the main. The final implosion was scheduled to occur on Saturday April 28, 2007 at 8:00 AM, but a detonation cable failure resulted in only about one-quarter of the bridge being knocked down. On Tuesday, May 1, just after 6 PM, the remainder of the bridge was demolished, leaving only the arch supports at either end.


Construction of the new Fulton Road Bridge

The replacement bridge overlooks the Cleveland Metroparks Zoo and spans a historic footbridge, two railroad tracks, a major water main, and several maintenance roads and footpaths - as did the original. It has four traffic lanes, two bicycle lanes, and sidewalks. The building contractor for the new bridge, Kokosing Construction Company, estimated the cost of replacing the bridge at $45,859,138.00. The new structure is an eleven-span, pre-cast, open- spandrel
arch bridge An arch bridge is a bridge with abutments at each end shaped as a curved arch. Arch bridges work by transferring the weight of the bridge and its loads partially into a horizontal thrust restrained by the abutments at either side. A viaduct ...
. According to the contractor, nearly "1,800 cubic yards of self-leveling mass concrete are contained in the bridge piers. These seven piers were post-tensioned to support the pre-cast arches, which were erected in segments on shoring towers and then post-tensioned as well. Following the erection of the arches, the spandrel columns and caps were poured. Pre-cast concrete beams were also erected to support the bridge deck."Contractor's webpage
/ref> There were several delays during the replacement project, some due to weather conditions. The original opening estimate for mid-2009 was pushed back several times, eventually as far as July, 2010, when the new bridge was finally opened for traffic. Cleveland city Councilman Kevin Kelley called the delays "incredibly frustrating", noting they were "beyond reasonable and not fair to merchants" many of whom had gone out of business due to rerouted traffic.


References


External links


Bridge news on the Cleveland Metroparks Zoo's site, including videos of the demolitionAn article on the bridge's closure and destructionConstruction Equipment Guide's article for the closureCleveland-media coverage of the implosion, including video of the demolition
*{{HAER , survey=OH-14 , id=oh0129 , title=Brookside Park Bridge, Spanning Big Creek & Cleveland Metroparks, Cleveland, Cuyahoga County, OH , photos=5 , cap=2 Open-spandrel deck arch bridges in the United States Bridges in Cleveland Bridges completed in 1932 Bridges completed in 2010 Demolished bridges in the United States Road bridges in Ohio Concrete bridges in the United States