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Sturgeon Bay Bridge

Coordinates: 44°49′55″N 87°22′52″W / 44.83194°N 87.38111°W / 44.83194; -87.38111
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Sturgeon Bay Bridge
The Sturgeon Bay Bridge in 2009, with the bascule draw span (at the far end) open
Coordinates44°49′55″N 87°22′52″W / 44.832°N 87.381°W / 44.832; -87.381
CarriesMichigan Street
CrossesSturgeon Bay
LocaleSturgeon Bay, Wisconsin
Other name(s)Michigan Street Bridge
Characteristics
DesignBascule
MaterialSteel
Total length1,420 feet (430 m)
Width24.0 feet (7.3 m)
Clearance above11.5 feet (3.5 m)
History
DesignerHarrington Keller
Opened1931[1]
Sturgeon Bay Bridge
Sturgeon Bay Bridge is located in Wisconsin
Sturgeon Bay Bridge
Sturgeon Bay Bridge is located in the United States
Sturgeon Bay Bridge
Nearest citySturgeon Bay, Wisconsin
Coordinates44°49′55″N 87°22′52″W / 44.83194°N 87.38111°W / 44.83194; -87.38111
Built1930–1931
NRHP reference No.07001420 [2]
Added to NRHPJanuary 17, 2008
Rebuilt2009-2010 (walkway)
Closed2009-2011 (temporarily)
ReplacesAhnapee & Western Railroad Bridge
Statistics
Daily traffic15,300 (2005)
Location
Map

The Sturgeon Bay Bridge (known as the Michigan Street Bridge) is a historic bridge in Sturgeon Bay, Wisconsin, United States. The bridge was built in 1929 and opened July 4, 1931, with a grand parade where it was officially dedicated as a Door County Veterans Memorial which plaques at either end still reads "To honor those who gave of themselves, to their country, in times of need" as a gift by the State of Wisconsin. It was the only bridge linking the mainland to northern Door County after the train/toll bridge was discontinued. The Sturgeon Bay Bridge was listed on the National Register of Historic Places on January 17, 2008 for its unique upper rolling lift bascule and length. After a ten year battle to save the bridge from demolition and replace in-kind, it was determined by the state to add a second bridge as a sister to meet safety standards. In September 2008, after the opening of a new, parallel, two-lane sister bridge was opened one block away at Oregon Street, the historic bridge was temporarily closed to allow for restoration work to commence. Federal safety standards required four-lane replacement in order to accommodate the heavy traffic loads and congestion caused by the bridge's 3,000 openings annually. The historic bridge and new bridge operate as one system. The historic bridge was reopened in the spring of 2011.[1]

History

The Sturgeon Bay Bridge opened July 4, 1931. At the time of its opening, it was the second bridge in Sturgeon Bay, the first being the toll bridge to the north that also carried the Ahnapee and Western railroad line across the bay. The historic Sturgeon Bay Bridge carried Wisconsin Highway 42 and Wisconsin Highway 57 until the Bay View Bridge was built in 1978. The two highways were rerouted onto the Bay View Bridge in order to bypass Sturgeon Bay. Subsequently, the Sturgeon Bay Bridge was designated as Wisconsin Business Highway 42/57.

The Sturgeon Bay Bridge underwent a major rehabilitation in 1979.[3] By the 1990s, the bridge became notorious for needing maintenance; a Wisconsin Department of Transportation spokesman said in 1999 that "we have been maintaining this bridge since it was built".[4] The bridge was closed several times for repairs in the late 1990s, and the state began to look at plans to replace the bridge. The state's plans prompted the Citizens for Our Bridge (now the sturgeon Bay Historical Society) to list the bridge onto the National Register and Wisconsin Trust for Historic Preservation to list it as one of the ten most endangered sites in Wisconsin.[5] In 2002, the city of Sturgeon Bay and the state of Wisconsin agreed to build a second bridge in downtown Sturgeon Bay to avoid traffic congestion and cutting off northern Door County if the Michigan Street Bridge closed for repairs.[6] The state agreed to designate the original bridge as a state business highway in 2003, allowing the state to construct and own a replacement bridge which marked another step towards the construction of a second bridge.[7] After a city referendum in 2005, Wisconsin Governor Jim Doyle signed a bill to fund a second downtown bridge, and construction soon began on a bridge connecting Maple and Oregon streets.[8]

Due to the state decision to replace the Historic Sturgeon Bay Bridge, a historic preservationist group called Citizens for Our Bridge (now SB Historical society) formed to protect the bridge by raising community awareness in order to secure funding for its restoration. The group sponsored a benefit concert, the Steel Bridge Songfest, in 2005; the concert was headlined by Jackson Browne and Green Bay native Pat MacDonald.[9] Citizens for Our Bridge has held the concert annually since 2005; the 2009 concert included 150 performers, including Jane Wiedlin, James McMurtry, Freedy Johnston, Victor DeLorenzo, and Louise Goffin.[10]

While the second bridge was being built, the Sturgeon Bay Bridge continued to fall into disrepair, and maintenance became urgently needed. A 2007 bridge inspection assessed the bridge as structurally deficient, mainly due to its size and presumed poor superstructure and substructure.[3] In July 2008, the bridge was closed to all traffic for two days because of structural (gear) problems; once it reopened, it still only carried light traffic, and a bridge tender and law enforcement rigidly enforced the weight limit.[11] Once the Maple and Oregon Street Bridge opened on September 22[clarification needed], the Sturgeon Bay Bridge closed to all traffic again so repair work could be done.[8] In 2008, the Wisconsin Department of Transportation announced its plan to restore the bridge due to its historic significance and construct a second sister bridge.[12] In December 2010 the bridge was reopened to foot and vehicle traffic. The bridge was then re-opened in spring 2011 to foot and vehicle traffic after painting was completed. Newer features to the bridge include LED lights, traffic signals, and CCTV cameras. The bridge also transitioned from manual openings to remote controlled operations. In 2012, a recreational vehicle was hit by the bridge due to an operator error.[13]

Traffic comparison

Average daily traffic by year; bridge traffic monitors at Michigan and Oregon streets[14]

  Sturgeon Bay Bridge (Michigan Street)
  Oregon Street Bridge
Notes: data is unavailable from 2009–2010 for both bridges and in 2011 for Sturgeon Bay Bridge; 2019 figures are preliminary

Images

References

  1. ^ a b "Strong as Steel: Sturgeon Bay's Michigan Street Bridge". Voyageur Magazine. Archived from the original on August 25, 2013. Retrieved March 12, 2013.
  2. ^ "NPS Focus". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. May 30, 2009.
  3. ^ a b "Michigan Street Bridge". Historic bridges of the United States. Retrieved May 31, 2009.
  4. ^ Nelesen, Andy (June 3, 1999). "Bridge repairs set for Monday". Green Bay Press-Gazette.
  5. ^ Garza, Jesse (June 8, 1998). "Life span of bridge in Sturgeon Bay stretches on". Milwaukee Journal Sentinel.
  6. ^ Brinkmann, Paul (November 1, 2003). "Green says top priority is Sturgeon Bay Bridge". Green Bay Press-Gazette.
  7. ^ Brinkmann, Paul. "Plan for 2nd downtown bridge in Sturgeon Bay gets a boost". Green Bay Press-Gazette.
  8. ^ a b Kubisiak, Kristen. "Residents come out to give bridge a test drive". Green Bay Press-Gazette.
  9. ^ Brinkmann, Paul (April 7, 2005). "Benefit concert aims to buoy Sturgeon Bay bridge". Green Bay Press-Gazette.
  10. ^ Tianen, Dave (May 29, 2009). "Steel Bridge Songfest supports Sturgeon Bay structure's repairs". Milwaukee Journal Sentinel.
  11. ^ "Sturgeon Bay Bridge Reopens". Green Bay, Wisconsin. WFRV-TV. July 23, 2008. Retrieved November 7, 2008. [dead link]
  12. ^ "Sturgeon Bay bridge projects". Wisconsin Department of Transportation. Archived from the original on June 3, 2008. Retrieved November 3, 2008.
  13. ^ https://www.greenbaypressgazette.com/story/news/local/door-co/2017/05/05/lift-bridges-form-one-kind-waterway/101335476/
  14. ^ Traffic Count Map, continuous traffic monitors located south of each bridge, Wisconsin DOT