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Howard Frankland Bridge

The W. Howard Frankland Bridge is the central fixed-link bridge spanning Old Tampa Bay from St. Petersburg, Florida to Tampa, Florida. It is one of three bridges connecting Hillsborough County and Pinellas County; the others being Gandy Bridge and Courtney Campbell Causeway. The bridge carries Interstate 275 and is by far the most traveled of the bay's bridges.[1][2][3]

W. Howard Frankland Bridge
Aerial view of the bridge in 2018
Coordinates27°55′41″N 82°35′15″W / 27.92793°N 82.58755°W / 27.92793; -82.58755
Carries8 lanes of I-275
CrossesOld Tampa Bay
LocaleSt. Petersburg to Tampa, Florida
Other name(s)Howard Franklin, Frankland Bridge
Named forWilliam Howard Frankland
Maintained byFlorida Department of Transportation
ID number150107 (northbound)
150210 (southbound)
Characteristics
Total length15,872 ft (4,838 m) (northbound)
15,900 ft (4,846 m) (southbound)
Width58.4 ft (17.8 m) (northbound)
68.9 ft (21.0 m) (southbound)
Clearance below43 ft (13 m) (northbound)
48.9 ft (14.9 m) (southbound)
History
Opened1960 (northbound)
1990 (southbound)
Statistics
Daily traffic135,000 (2006)[1][2][3]
Location

Work began in fall 2020 to rebuild this bridge with separate pedestrian and bicycle lanes, with completion expected in late 2025. The new bridge will be north of the existing bridge. As a result, traffic is able to use the existing bridge while the new, bigger bridge is being built. The existing southbound bridge will be converted to northbound lanes, once the new bridge is completed.[4]

The bridge is often incorrectly referred to as the Howard Franklin Bridge.

History edit

 
The original span looking west toward St. Petersburg

Named for the man who proposed it, Tampa businessman Howard Frankland, the bridge opened in April 1960 and carried four lanes (two lanes in each direction separated by a short, narrow barrier). The bridge and approaches cost $16 million.[5]

Because of the bridge's design, including its lack of emergency shoulders, it proved to be dangerous. Accidents were common on the bridge and traffic backed up on both sides, leading to local nicknames, the "Howard Frankenstein Bridge" and "The Car-Strangled Spanner".[6] In 1962, a steel-reinforced tapered concrete barrier was installed "to prevent cars from hurtling the median and crashing into oncoming traffic." Ten people had already died.[7] The bridge was the subject of a 60 Minutes broadcast in the 1960s noting the below-average construction methods used.[citation needed]

Planning for a larger-capacity replacement began in 1978. Original plans ranged from a large, multi-lane suspension (or similar type) bridge, to two parallel bridges (with the central span reserved for HOV lanes). As traffic projections increased, further exacerbated by a disaster on the Sunshine Skyway Bridge in 1980, it was clear that the new bridge would need to handle at least eight lanes (four in each direction). By 1987, it was concluded that a parallel, four lane span would be built. Plans were also made to rehabilitate the older bridge after the new bridge opened.

Construction began on the new span in 1988. The new $54 million southbound span was opened to traffic in 1990. The older bridge was then closed, rehabilitated, and reopened in 1992. The older northbound span is shorter and has a steeper hump than the newer southbound span.

Bypass system edit

Before the parallel bridge was built, I-275 utilized a bypass designation system. Whenever there would be a major delay at the Howard Frankland Bridge, special signs would alert drivers to the delay and direct them to utilize the bypass, which ran along SR 694 and across the Gandy Bridge, to the Lee Roy Selmon Expressway, Willow Avenue, Howard Avenue, and ending at Interstate 275. Special shields (marked N and S) along the route made sure that drivers were using the correct thoroughfare.[citation needed]

Reconstruction of the bridge edit

 
I-275 Northbound approaching Exit 39 with redesigned and updated sign after Howard Frankland Bridge section.

After the widening project in 1992, Interstate 275 was increased to eight lanes on the bridge itself. However, this did not increase capacity on either end of the bridge. Backups were still seen on the Howard Frankland heading into Tampa, primarily due to a bottleneck at the SR 60/Veterans Expressway exit. On the St. Petersburg side, after a comprehensive reconstruction project that took over ten years, lane counts were increased from four lanes prior to the bridge to six lanes through downtown St. Petersburg, and eight lanes from Gandy Boulevard to the bridge.

A reconstruction project was planned to begin in 2017 for the new Gateway Expressway project, a plan to build a new toll road to connect different parts in Pinellas County. However, FDOT planned to reconstruct the interstate in smaller phases rather than the original larger two-phase project and the start of construction was delayed to 2020.

Once the reconstruction project is finished in 2025, major traffic congestion on the Howard Frankland bridge is expected to be significantly reduced by the addition of new lanes.[8] On January 7, 2021, FDOT postponed by a week to January 16, 2021 the start date for removing an overpass and the corresponding exit ramp over I-275. It had been scheduled to shut down by 8 p.m., EST, January 9, through January 10. This work was part of the U.S. $600 million toll road project.[9] On January 16 to 17, 2021, workers removed the 4th street north interchange bridge (overpass) from 8 p.m. on January 16, to 12 p.m. on January 17. Exit 32 was closed until late 2021 while the new overpass is constructed.[10]

Overall construction on this large project began in fall 2020 and completion is expected in late 2025.[4] A completely new bridge will carry southbound traffic. Once that bridge is completed, the existing southbound bridge will be converted to carry northbound traffic. When all traffic is moved to the final alignment, the existing northbound bridge will be removed.[4] The newly built bridge for southbound traffic will include a separate pathway for pedestrian and bicycle traffic, and additional vehicle traffic lanes.[4]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b (PDF) (Map). Pinellas County Metropolitan Planning Organization. Archived from the original (PDF) on December 15, 2007. Retrieved January 13, 2008.
  2. ^ a b (PDF) (Map). Florida Department of Transportation. Archived from the original (PDF) on February 16, 2008. Retrieved January 13, 2008.
  3. ^ a b (PDF). Florida Department of Transportation. pp. Site 0062. Archived from the original (PDF) on February 16, 2008. Retrieved January 13, 2008.
  4. ^ a b c d "I-275 (Howard Frankland Bridge) New southbound bridge between Pinellas and Hillsborough counties". Florida Department of Transportation. Retrieved March 27, 2022. The new bridge is being built north of the current southbound/westbound (St. Petersburg to Tampa) interstate bridge. The new bridge will consist of eight lanes; four general use lanes, (Tampa to St. Petersburg) and four Express lanes; two lanes from the St. Petersburg side toward Tampa, two lanes from the Tampa side toward St. Petersburg. A bicycle/pedestrian pathway separated from the roadway will is also included. The existing southbound/westbound (Tampa to St. Petersburg) bridge will be converted to the new northbound/eastbound I-275 (St. Petersburg to Tampa). Once the new bridge is built and all traffic is moved to the final alignment, the existing northbound/eastbound (St. Petersburg to Tampa) bridge will be removed.
  5. ^ Franklands to Play Key Role in Bridge Opening St. Petersburg Times, January 15, 1960
  6. ^ The Francis Scott Key Bridge on the Baltimore Beltway is also derisively referred to as "The Car Strangled Spanner," from which those stopped in traffic can actually see Fort McHenry and the harbor where the national anthem was written by the bridge's namesake.
  7. ^ Bayway Paving Job to Start in Two Weeks St. Petersburg Times, January 30, 1962
  8. ^ Hensen, Chuck (April 18, 2018). "GETTING THERE: Lanes to be added to Howard Frankland Bridge". Bay News 9. Retrieved March 27, 2022.
  9. ^ "Howard Frankland Bridge construction project postponed to Jan. 16". WFLA News Channel 8. Tampa, Florida. January 8, 2021. Retrieved March 27, 2022.
  10. ^ Arradondo, Briona (January 16, 2021). "Howard Frankland Bridge back open after overpass removal on Pinellas side". Fox 13 Tampa Bay. Retrieved March 27, 2022.

External links edit

  • Howard Frankland Bridge page at Interstate275Florida.com
  • I-275 plan hits $100M bump Article on the 2006 I-275 expansion setback St. Petersburg Times (June 28, 2006)

howard, frankland, bridge, central, fixed, link, bridge, spanning, tampa, from, petersburg, florida, tampa, florida, three, bridges, connecting, hillsborough, county, pinellas, county, others, being, gandy, bridge, courtney, campbell, causeway, bridge, carries. The W Howard Frankland Bridge is the central fixed link bridge spanning Old Tampa Bay from St Petersburg Florida to Tampa Florida It is one of three bridges connecting Hillsborough County and Pinellas County the others being Gandy Bridge and Courtney Campbell Causeway The bridge carries Interstate 275 and is by far the most traveled of the bay s bridges 1 2 3 W Howard Frankland BridgeAerial view of the bridge in 2018Coordinates27 55 41 N 82 35 15 W 27 92793 N 82 58755 W 27 92793 82 58755Carries8 lanes of I 275CrossesOld Tampa BayLocaleSt Petersburg to Tampa FloridaOther name s Howard Franklin Frankland BridgeNamed forWilliam Howard FranklandMaintained byFlorida Department of TransportationID number150107 northbound 150210 southbound CharacteristicsTotal length15 872 ft 4 838 m northbound 15 900 ft 4 846 m southbound Width58 4 ft 17 8 m northbound 68 9 ft 21 0 m southbound Clearance below43 ft 13 m northbound 48 9 ft 14 9 m southbound HistoryOpened1960 northbound 1990 southbound StatisticsDaily traffic135 000 2006 1 2 3 Location Work began in fall 2020 to rebuild this bridge with separate pedestrian and bicycle lanes with completion expected in late 2025 The new bridge will be north of the existing bridge As a result traffic is able to use the existing bridge while the new bigger bridge is being built The existing southbound bridge will be converted to northbound lanes once the new bridge is completed 4 The bridge is often incorrectly referred to as the Howard Franklin Bridge Contents 1 History 2 Bypass system 3 Reconstruction of the bridge 4 See also 5 References 6 External linksHistory edit nbsp The original span looking west toward St PetersburgNamed for the man who proposed it Tampa businessman Howard Frankland the bridge opened in April 1960 and carried four lanes two lanes in each direction separated by a short narrow barrier The bridge and approaches cost 16 million 5 Because of the bridge s design including its lack of emergency shoulders it proved to be dangerous Accidents were common on the bridge and traffic backed up on both sides leading to local nicknames the Howard Frankenstein Bridge and The Car Strangled Spanner 6 In 1962 a steel reinforced tapered concrete barrier was installed to prevent cars from hurtling the median and crashing into oncoming traffic Ten people had already died 7 The bridge was the subject of a 60 Minutes broadcast in the 1960s noting the below average construction methods used citation needed Planning for a larger capacity replacement began in 1978 Original plans ranged from a large multi lane suspension or similar type bridge to two parallel bridges with the central span reserved for HOV lanes As traffic projections increased further exacerbated by a disaster on the Sunshine Skyway Bridge in 1980 it was clear that the new bridge would need to handle at least eight lanes four in each direction By 1987 it was concluded that a parallel four lane span would be built Plans were also made to rehabilitate the older bridge after the new bridge opened Construction began on the new span in 1988 The new 54 million southbound span was opened to traffic in 1990 The older bridge was then closed rehabilitated and reopened in 1992 The older northbound span is shorter and has a steeper hump than the newer southbound span Bypass system editThis section has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This section needs to be updated Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information January 2021 This section needs expansion with More information on the Bypass system You can help by adding to it January 2021 This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed February 2021 Learn how and when to remove this message Learn how and when to remove this message Before the parallel bridge was built I 275 utilized a bypass designation system Whenever there would be a major delay at the Howard Frankland Bridge special signs would alert drivers to the delay and direct them to utilize the bypass which ran along SR 694 and across the Gandy Bridge to the Lee Roy Selmon Expressway Willow Avenue Howard Avenue and ending at Interstate 275 Special shields marked N and S along the route made sure that drivers were using the correct thoroughfare citation needed Reconstruction of the bridge edit nbsp I 275 Northbound approaching Exit 39 with redesigned and updated sign after Howard Frankland Bridge section After the widening project in 1992 Interstate 275 was increased to eight lanes on the bridge itself However this did not increase capacity on either end of the bridge Backups were still seen on the Howard Frankland heading into Tampa primarily due to a bottleneck at the SR 60 Veterans Expressway exit On the St Petersburg side after a comprehensive reconstruction project that took over ten years lane counts were increased from four lanes prior to the bridge to six lanes through downtown St Petersburg and eight lanes from Gandy Boulevard to the bridge A reconstruction project was planned to begin in 2017 for the new Gateway Expressway project a plan to build a new toll road to connect different parts in Pinellas County However FDOT planned to reconstruct the interstate in smaller phases rather than the original larger two phase project and the start of construction was delayed to 2020 Once the reconstruction project is finished in 2025 major traffic congestion on the Howard Frankland bridge is expected to be significantly reduced by the addition of new lanes 8 On January 7 2021 FDOT postponed by a week to January 16 2021 the start date for removing an overpass and the corresponding exit ramp over I 275 It had been scheduled to shut down by 8 p m EST January 9 through January 10 This work was part of the U S 600 million toll road project 9 On January 16 to 17 2021 workers removed the 4th street north interchange bridge overpass from 8 p m on January 16 to 12 p m on January 17 Exit 32 was closed until late 2021 while the new overpass is constructed 10 Overall construction on this large project began in fall 2020 and completion is expected in late 2025 4 A completely new bridge will carry southbound traffic Once that bridge is completed the existing southbound bridge will be converted to carry northbound traffic When all traffic is moved to the final alignment the existing northbound bridge will be removed 4 The newly built bridge for southbound traffic will include a separate pathway for pedestrian and bicycle traffic and additional vehicle traffic lanes 4 See also edit nbsp Transport portal nbsp Engineering portal nbsp Florida portalReferences edit a b 2006 Average Annual Daily Traffic Counts in Pinellas County A A D T PDF Map Pinellas County Metropolitan Planning Organization Archived from the original PDF on December 15 2007 Retrieved January 13 2008 a b PTMS and TTMS Sites 2006 Pinellas County 15 PDF Map Florida Department of Transportation Archived from the original PDF on February 16 2008 Retrieved January 13 2008 a b 2006 Annual Average Daily Traffic Report PDF Florida Department of Transportation pp Site 0062 Archived from the original PDF on February 16 2008 Retrieved January 13 2008 a b c d I 275 Howard Frankland Bridge New southbound bridge between Pinellas and Hillsborough counties Florida Department of Transportation Retrieved March 27 2022 The new bridge is being built north of the current southbound westbound St Petersburg to Tampa interstate bridge The new bridge will consist of eight lanes four general use lanes Tampa to St Petersburg and four Express lanes two lanes from the St Petersburg side toward Tampa two lanes from the Tampa side toward St Petersburg A bicycle pedestrian pathway separated from the roadway will is also included The existing southbound westbound Tampa to St Petersburg bridge will be converted to the new northbound eastbound I 275 St Petersburg to Tampa Once the new bridge is built and all traffic is moved to the final alignment the existing northbound eastbound St Petersburg to Tampa bridge will be removed Franklands to Play Key Role in Bridge Opening St Petersburg Times January 15 1960 The Francis Scott Key Bridge on the Baltimore Beltway is also derisively referred to as The Car Strangled Spanner from which those stopped in traffic can actually see Fort McHenry and the harbor where the national anthem was written by the bridge s namesake Bayway Paving Job to Start in Two Weeks St Petersburg Times January 30 1962 Hensen Chuck April 18 2018 GETTING THERE Lanes to be added to Howard Frankland Bridge Bay News 9 Retrieved March 27 2022 Howard Frankland Bridge construction project postponed to Jan 16 WFLA News Channel 8 Tampa Florida January 8 2021 Retrieved March 27 2022 Arradondo Briona January 16 2021 Howard Frankland Bridge back open after overpass removal on Pinellas side Fox 13 Tampa Bay Retrieved March 27 2022 External links editHoward Frankland Bridge page at Interstate275Florida com I 275 plan hits 100M bump Article on the 2006 I 275 expansion setback St Petersburg Times June 28 2006 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Howard Frankland Bridge amp oldid 1207332830, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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