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23-408: (Redirected from Francis Scott Key Bridge ) Key Bridge , Francis Scott Key Bridge , or FSK Bridge may refer to: Francis Scott Key Bridge (Baltimore) , the 1977 bridge that collapsed in 2024 Francis Scott Key Bridge collapse Francis Scott Key Bridge replacement , a project planned for completion in 2028 Key Bridge (Washington, D.C.) in

46-507: A bridge permit in June 1972, replacing the earlier approval of the tunnel by the Army Corps of Engineers . Baltimore engineering firm J. E. Greiner Company was selected as the primary design consultant, with the side approaches being handled by New York City's Singstad, Kehart, November & Hurka in joint venture with Baltimore Transportation Associates, Inc. The construction was to be performed by

69-445: A continuous truss. These bridges may appear to be—or may incorporate elements of—a different design. For example, the now destroyed Francis Scott Key Bridge incorporated an arch shape into the design, but was continuous across multiple spans. The Key Bridge acted first as a continuous truss bridge and secondarily as an arch bridge. This list does not include cantilever bridges . Only bridges that are currently in use are included in

92-424: A reinforced concrete cap. These piers also had 17-foot fender system : crushable thin-walled concrete boxes of 100 by 84.5 feet, clad with timber members and steel plate at the base. In 1976, as construction went on, the bridge was named for Francis Scott Key , the author of "The Defence of Fort M'Henry", the poem upon which " The Star-Spangled Banner " is based. Key was inspired to write the poem after witnessing

115-562: Is a partially collapsed bridge in the Baltimore metropolitan area , Maryland . Opened in 1977, it collapsed on March 26, 2024, after a container ship struck one of its piers . Officials have announced plans to replace the bridge by fall 2028. It was built as a steel arch continuous through truss bridge that spanned the lower Patapsco River and outer Baltimore Harbor/Port in Maryland , United States. Opened on March 23, 1977, it carried

138-619: The Baltimore Beltway ( Interstate 695 or I-695) between Dundalk in Baltimore County and Hawkins Point , an isolated southern neighborhood of Baltimore , while briefly passing through Anne Arundel County . Initially named the Outer Harbor Crossing , the bridge was renamed in 1976 for poet Francis Scott Key , who wrote the lyrics to " The Star-Spangled Banner ", the U.S. national anthem . At 8,636 feet (2,632 m), it

161-585: The John F. Beasley Construction Company with material fabricated by the Pittsburgh-Des Moines Steel Co. Construction of the Outer Harbor Bridge began in 1972, several years behind schedule and $ 33 million over budget. Each of the bridge's main piers—Nos. 17 and 18—was protected by dolphins upstream and downstream, each with a 25-foot-diameter sheet pile filled with tremie concrete with

184-599: The Patapsco shipping channel, immediately halted almost all passenger and cargo shipping to the Port of Baltimore. Maryland Governor Wes Moore declared a state of emergency. Economic losses were initially estimated at $ 15 million per day. Insurers are expected to incur multi-billion dollar losses for the damages, business disruptions, and liability claims. Three temporary channels were opened by April 20, allowing about 15% of pre-collapse shipping to pass. A temporary deep-draft channel

207-577: The United States Key Bridge, Tewkesbury, England, built ca. 1470 and maintained under an 1808 act of Parliament See also [ edit ] All pages with titles containing Key Bridge Keybridge , a hamlet in Blisland, Cornwall, England Topics referred to by the same term [REDACTED] This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title Key Bridge . If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change

230-547: The bids to build the tunnel were opened in July 1970, they were substantially higher than expected. So officials drafted alternative proposals, including a four-lane bridge , which had the advantage of providing a route across Baltimore Harbor for vehicles carrying hazardous materials barred from tunnels. In April 1971, the Maryland General Assembly approved the bridge project. The United States Coast Guard issued

253-641: The bombardment of Fort McHenry during the Battle of Baltimore in September 1814. Key had been aboard an American truce ship with the British Royal Navy fleet in Baltimore Harbor near Sollers Point; the approximate location is within 100 yards (91 m) of the bridge and marked by a buoy in the colors of the U.S. flag. The Key Bridge opened to traffic on March 23, 1977. Including its connecting approaches,

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276-412: The bridge are believed to be the only people injured or killed in the disaster. Six bodies were recovered, and two people were rescued,: one uninjured, the other transported to a hospital in critical condition. A mayday distress call sent by the ship's crew just before the collision led police and bridge workers to halt traffic onto the bridge, likely saving many lives. The collapse, which blocked

299-451: The bridge by the fall of 2028 at an estimated cost of $ 1.7 billion to $ 1.9 billion. List of longest continuous truss bridge spans This list of continuous bridge spans ranks the world's continuous truss bridges in two listings: The first is ranked by the length of main span (the longest length of unsupported roadway) and the second by the total length of continuous truss spans . Both lists include bridges that act primarily as

322-601: The bridge project was 1.6 miles (2.57 km) in length with 8.7 miles (14.00 km) of approach road. In 1978, the bridge received an Award of Merit from the American Institute of Steel Construction in the Long Span category. In 1980, a cargo ship collided with the Key Bridge, but the bridge was relatively undamaged. The bridge opened with four lanes, but its approaches were two lanes to reduce costs. The south approach

345-414: The bridge. For bridges that have the same span length, the older bridge is listed first. It is also possible to rank continuous truss bridges by the sum of the continuous spans. Note that if the bridge has an expansion joint (a discontinuity), the sections of the bridge would be considered separate (by the definition of a continuous bridge) for the purposes of this ranking. The Yoshima Bridge

368-466: The link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Key_Bridge&oldid=1249601193 " Category : Disambiguation pages Hidden categories: Short description is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages Francis Scott Key Bridge (Baltimore) The Francis Scott Key Bridge (informally, Key Bridge or Beltway Bridge )

391-482: The main spans of the bridge collapsed after the Singapore -registered container ship MV Dali lost power and collided with the southwest supporting pier of the main truss section. The NTSB noted that the Key Bridge was built before the introduction of redundant support structures, which are widely used in modern bridges and would have prevented such a collapse. Members of an eight-person maintenance crew working on

414-416: The rankings. Bridges currently being planned, designed, or constructed and bridges that have been destroyed or demolished are noted separately. The length of main span is the most common method of comparing the size of bridges. The length of the main span will often correlate with the depth of the truss (height the truss from bottom to top) and the engineering complexity involved in designing and constructing

437-468: The tunnels. The construction of the bridge and its approaches completed the two-decade effort to build I-695, although the bridge roadway was officially a state road: the unsigned Maryland Route 695 . By the early 1960s, the Baltimore Harbor Tunnel (Interstate 895), the first crossing of Baltimore's Harbor, had reached its traffic capacity. The Maryland State Roads Commission concluded there

460-555: Was a need for a second harbor crossing. They began planning another single-tube tunnel under the Patapsco River , downstream and to the southeast, between Hawkins Point and Sollers Point in the outer harbor. In October 1968, this Outer Harbor Tunnel project received financing through a $ 220 million bond issue (equivalent to $ 1.9 billion in 2023) that also funded the twinning of the Chesapeake Bay Bridge . But when

483-495: Was opened on April 25, allowing some larger ships to enter and leave, then closed on April 29, enabling salvage crews to resume removing bridge wreckage. In May, the authorities announced that they would use explosives to blow up most parts of the bridge. Hours after the collapse, President Joe Biden said that the federal government would pay for the entire cost of reconstructing the bridge. On May 2, 2024, Maryland Department of Transportation officials said they plan to replace

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506-683: Was the second-longest bridge in the Baltimore metropolitan area , after the Chesapeake Bay Bridge . Its main span of 1,200 feet (366 m) was the third-longest of any continuous truss in the world . Operated by the Maryland Transportation Authority (MDTA), the bridge was the outermost of three toll crossings of Baltimore 's harbor, along with the Baltimore Harbor and Fort McHenry tunnels. The bridge carried an estimated 11.5 million vehicles annually, including many trucks carrying hazardous materials that are prohibited in

529-483: Was widened in 1983. A project for the north approach was completed in 1999 after several years of delays. In July 2013, the toll for cars was $ 4. The bridge was part of the E-ZPass system and its toll plaza included two dedicated E-ZPass lanes in each direction. On October 30, 2019, the bridge's tolling went fully cashless ; drivers paid via E-ZPass or video tolling . On March 26, 2024, at 01:28 EDT (05:28 UTC ),

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