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Rickenbacker Causeway

The Rickenbacker Causeway is a causeway that connects Miami, Florida to the barrier islands of Virginia Key and Key Biscayne across Biscayne Bay.[2]

Rickenbacker Causeway
Rickenbacker Causeway as seen from
Downtown Miami, February 2010
Coordinates25°44′01″N 80°09′45″W / 25.7336°N 80.1624°W / 25.7336; -80.1624
Carries6 lanes of unsigned SR 913
CrossesBiscayne Bay
LocaleThe Roads, Miami to Key Biscayne
Maintained byFDOT
Characteristics
Total length5.4 miles (8.7 km)
Longest span0.6 miles (0.97 km)
History
OpenedNovember 9, 1947; 75 years ago (November 9, 1947)[1]
Statistics
Toll$2.25
Location

Background Edit

The Causeway is a toll road, owned and operated by Miami-Dade County. Automobiles traveling southbound from Miami pay a toll of US$2.25[3] as of 2018; northbound traffic is not charged any toll. Tolls are collected via Sunpass; C-Pass transponders or cash are no longer accepted.[4]

In July 2021, Mayor Daniella Levine Cava proposed a renovation of major parts of the causeway including replacement of the Bear Cut Bridge and improvements to cyclist safety, recreation, and sustainability as part of a public private partnership.[5] The Village of Key Biscayne, for which the causeway is the only ingress and egress to Miami, is participating in the process.[6]

Also known as (unsigned) State Road 913[7][8] west of the toll plaza, the causeway's northbound continuation is a flyover ramp with forks to northbound Interstate 95 (unsigned SR 9A) and southbound South Dixie Highway (US 1/unsigned SR 5); the southbound continuation is Crandon Boulevard, which extends roughly five miles through the center of Key Biscayne, terminating near the Cape Florida Lighthouse in Bill Baggs Cape Florida State Park.

Named after Eddie Rickenbacker, the American World War I flying ace and founder and president of Miami-based Eastern Air Lines, the causeway provides access to the Miami Seaquarium, the University of Miami Rosenstiel School of Marine and Atmospheric Science, MAST Academy, Virginia Key Park, and Miami Marine Stadium on Virginia Key, and to Crandon Park, the Village of Key Biscayne, and Bill Baggs Cape Florida State Park on the island of Key Biscayne.

History Edit

 
Rickenbacker Causeway, 2014
 
The Applied Marine Physics Building at the University of Miami's Rosenstiel School of Marine and Atmospheric Science, located off Rickenbacker Causeway on Virginia Key, September 2007
 
View of Downtown Miami from the bridge

Talk of a bridge to Key Biscayne, inspired by the bridges connecting Miami to Miami Beach, started in 1926. The northern two-thirds of Key Biscayne was owned by William John “W.J.” Matheson, who had established a coconut plantation on the island. In February 1926 Matheson entered into an agreement with land developer D. P. Davis to develop and re-sell the northern half of Key Biscayne, including all of what is now Crandon Park and about half of the present Village of Key Biscayne. Later in 1926 the City of Coral Gables incorporated with Key Biscayne included in its boundaries. There were dreams of a bridge to the island, making Key Biscayne the seaside resort for Coral Gables that Miami Beach had become for Miami.

Obstacles to the project soon appeared. In March 1926 the U.S. government auctioned off some lots on Key Biscayne that had been retained when the rest of the island was transferred to the State of Florida. The Mathesons wanted to have clear title to all of their land, and determined to outbid other interested parties for the land. They ended up paying US$58,055 for a total of 6.84 acres (2.77 ha) of land, a record price per acre for the auction of U.S. government land up to that date. Then, on September 18, 1926, the Great Miami Hurricane crossed over Key Biscayne on its way to Miami. While there were no deaths on the island, most of the buildings on Key Biscayne were destroyed or badly damaged, and many of the plantings were lost, including half of the coconut trees. D. P. Davis was not able to meet his end of the contract; he declared bankruptcy and then disappeared en route to Europe by ship. The Florida Land Boom was over, as were plans for a bridge.

William Matheson died in 1930, leaving the island to his children. There was a flurry of interest in 1939, when the U.S. Navy approved a proposal to develop Virginia Key as an air base and sea port. There was even talk of putting an air base on the north end of Key Biscayne, as well. In 1940 William Matheson's heirs donated 808.8 acres (327.3 ha) of land (including two miles (3.2 km) of beach on the Atlantic Ocean) on the northern end of Key Biscayne to Dade County to be used as a public park (Crandon Park). The county commissioner who negotiated the gift, Charles H. Crandon, had offered for the county to build a causeway to Key Biscayne in exchange for the land donation. Planning for the air and sea complex on Virginia Key was still proceeding, and construction on a causeway to Virginia Key started in 1941. The Attack on Pearl Harbor and the entry of the United States into World War II stopped all work on the causeway and the development of Virginia Key.

After the war Crandon pushed on with the project. He got financier Ed Ball to buy $6 million worth of bonds financing the construction of the causeway. Land for the toll plaza and the causeway entrance was bought from the estate of James Deering. Fill dredged from the bottom of Biscayne Bay and dug from the mainland were used as both the road bed and public beach areas, both to the west of Virginia Beach and on the southern reaches of the island. In November 1947 the Rickenbacker Causeway – 1.2 miles (1.9 km) of bridges and 2.7 miles (4.3 km) of roadway on fill – finally opened.[9]

In the late 1960s and 1970s the sites along the Rickenbacker Causeway continued to increase in popularity. After increasing in the mid 1960 because of the American television series Flipper, attendance to the Miami Seaquarium soared in 1968 when it started to display Hugo, its first killer whale (two years later, Lolita became their second. The two killer whales performed together until Hugo's death in 1980). Shortly afterward, Planet Ocean, a themed tourist attraction, opened its doors. Newly integrated beaches were often crowded; the causeway near the drawbridge across the Intracoastal Waterway, and bridgeway near the mainland, became favorite fishing spots.

But popularity had a price: by 1980 it became evident that the concrete and steel structures supporting the roadway west of Virginia Key needed replacement. Five years later, the high-rise William Powell Bridge and new bridging nearest the toll plaza were built and opened at a cost of $27 million. With exception of the drawbridge (which was removed) the old bridging was left intact to serve as fishing piers.[10] In 2011, the West Fishing Pier was demolished.[11]

Since the opening of the new bridge, the MAST Academy took over the site of the defunct Planet Ocean (the theme attraction closed in 1991); the Virginia Key site of the City of Miami's garbage dump became a Superfund site for cleanup; the beach at Bill Baggs Cape Florida State Park was gaining in popularity; but the Miami Marine Stadium has been virtually abandoned and the Miami Seaquarium has had a series of setbacks, from being devastated by hurricanes Andrew (1992) and Wilma (2005) and being prevented from expanding by threats of legal action by the newly incorporated Village of Key Biscayne. On the other hand, the entire length of the causeway, plus Crandon Boulevard, have become part of a popular bicycling route from Key Biscayne to Florida City.[citation needed]

Cycling Edit

According to the publication CityLab, Miami, Florida is not known as a bicycle-friendly city: It's listed as the fourth most dangerous city to bike in the U.S.; between 2010 and 2014, 47 people were killed cycling through the city. Florida is the state with most cyclist fatalities per capita in United States (the situation is just as bleak for pedestrians).[12]

Although bicycling is very popular on the Rickenbacker Causeway, no physical division between the cars and bikes exist. This lack of separation between bikes and cars, excessive speeds and driving under the influence has contributed to at least four fatalities since 2006. This has spurred many cyclists to push for better bike lanes and barriers to protect them from the high-speed traffic on the bridge. Architect, urban planner, and lifelong cyclist Bernard Zyscovich saw an opportunity to promote cycling as a more viable means of transportation in Miami and launched Plan Z for Miami.

Plan Z For Miami envisions a separated, partly elevated cycle-track that would connect the mainland to the causeway, bridge replacement and roadway elevation to account for future sea level rise as well as a new 20-acre park on Virginia Key created by shifting the roadway north. This pro bono effort by Zyscovich was in response to the death of Aaron Cohen, one of the four cyclists hit by cars on the Rickenbacker Causeway.[13]

It's necessary to clarify that Plan Z isn't just a bike path, although that's perhaps the most striking part of the proposal. As Zyscovich explains, the Rickenbacker Causeway urgently needs structural renovations, including more elevation to help it survive climate change. “There is sea level rise, there is the replacement of the bridge, there is a 20-acre new park,” says the architect. “The bicycle aspect is only one part of the bigger project. But bicycle safety is the basis for beginning to think about it.”[14]

The Rickenbacker Causeway and Crandon Boulevard are Miami-Dade's most popular bike routes for avid cyclists.[15]

The path would then run along the William Powell Bridge, providing an observation deck for viewing the Miami skyline, then continue on to Virginia Key. Zyscovich's plan also imagines a 20-acre waterfront park and beach at the entrance of Virginia Key, with a branch of paths connecting to Virginia Key Park, before continuing on to Key Biscayne.

Zyscovich thinks that Plan Z can kickstart a cultural change in the city. The project could join two other proposed infrastructure projects, a linear park called the Underline and the Ludlam Trail, a rails-to-trail multi-use path. “I think that what we are presenting is a concept large enough to contribute to creating a network,” the architect says. “If we can implement Plan Z, the Underline, and the Ludlam Trail, we are going to have thousands of users that will then become the advocacy group to demand more bicycle infrastructure.”[16]

In May 2017, Miami Dade County reclaimed land on Rickenbacker Causeway to help keep the Plan Z For Miami plan alive, The Miami Herald reported in May 2017.[17]

As of May 2022 Plan Z, is in the limbo after receiving very significant backslash from the Key Biscayne community as it incurs in an up to 80 year rights forfeiture to the Plan Z developers thus creating many uncertainties for the residents of the island who are not keen to have their only road to the mainland be dependent on a third party for no significant value to the island community.

References Edit

  1. ^ Henry Cavendish (9 November 1947). "Thousands to See Official Dedication of Causeway, Park". The Miami Daily News. Retrieved 31 May 2012.
  2. ^ American Map, Florida State Road Atlas (2003) ISBN 0-87530-450-8
  3. ^ "Rickenbacker Causeway Toll Increases A Quarter To Pay For Bear Cut Bridge Repairs". The Huffington Post. 24 January 2013. Retrieved 14 April 2013.
  4. ^ Miami-Dade County Online Services. "Rickenbacker Causeway - Miami-Dade County".
  5. ^ The Miami and Rickenbacker may be privatized. Some Miami Beach residents want out accessed Miami Herald Aug 5 2021
  6. ^ Cava: KB Will Get Seat At Causeway Table Key Biscayne Independent accessed 8/5/2021
  7. ^ Florida Department of Transportation, Official Florida Transportation Map 1998
  8. ^ "Florida @ SouthEastRoads - Florida 913".
  9. ^ Blank, Joan Gill. 1996. Key Biscayne. ISBN 1-56164-096-4. pp. 153-162.
  10. ^ Blank. p. 173.
  11. ^ "SFI".
  12. ^ "CityLab - Bloomberg".
  13. ^ http://planzmiami.com/
  14. ^ . www.builderonline.com. Archived from the original on 2017-03-15.
  15. ^ . Miami Herald. Archived from the original on 2017-03-03.
  16. ^ "CityLab - Bloomberg".
  17. ^ . Miami Herald. Archived from the original on 2017-05-09.

25°44′01″N 80°09′45″W / 25.7335608°N 80.1623748°W / 25.7335608; -80.1623748

rickenbacker, causeway, this, article, uses, bare, urls, which, uninformative, vulnerable, link, please, consider, converting, them, full, citations, ensure, article, remains, verifiable, maintains, consistent, citation, style, several, templates, tools, avail. This article uses bare URLs which are uninformative and vulnerable to link rot Please consider converting them to full citations to ensure the article remains verifiable and maintains a consistent citation style Several templates and tools are available to assist in formatting such as Reflinks documentation reFill documentation and Citation bot documentation August 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article reads more like a story than an encyclopedia entry Please help to introduce a more formal style and remove any personally invested tone so that this article meets Wikipedia s quality standards and conforms to the neutral point of view policy February 2020 The Rickenbacker Causeway is a causeway that connects Miami Florida to the barrier islands of Virginia Key and Key Biscayne across Biscayne Bay 2 Rickenbacker CausewayRickenbacker Causeway as seen fromDowntown Miami February 2010Coordinates25 44 01 N 80 09 45 W 25 7336 N 80 1624 W 25 7336 80 1624Carries6 lanes of unsigned SR 913CrossesBiscayne BayLocaleThe Roads Miami to Key BiscayneMaintained byFDOTCharacteristicsTotal length5 4 miles 8 7 km Longest span0 6 miles 0 97 km HistoryOpenedNovember 9 1947 75 years ago November 9 1947 1 StatisticsToll 2 25Location Contents 1 Background 2 History 2 1 Cycling 3 ReferencesBackground EditThe Causeway is a toll road owned and operated by Miami Dade County Automobiles traveling southbound from Miami pay a toll of US 2 25 3 as of 2018 northbound traffic is not charged any toll Tolls are collected via Sunpass C Pass transponders or cash are no longer accepted 4 In July 2021 Mayor Daniella Levine Cava proposed a renovation of major parts of the causeway including replacement of the Bear Cut Bridge and improvements to cyclist safety recreation and sustainability as part of a public private partnership 5 The Village of Key Biscayne for which the causeway is the only ingress and egress to Miami is participating in the process 6 Also known as unsigned State Road 913 7 8 west of the toll plaza the causeway s northbound continuation is a flyover ramp with forks to northbound Interstate 95 unsigned SR 9A and southbound South Dixie Highway US 1 unsigned SR 5 the southbound continuation is Crandon Boulevard which extends roughly five miles through the center of Key Biscayne terminating near the Cape Florida Lighthouse in Bill Baggs Cape Florida State Park Named after Eddie Rickenbacker the American World War I flying ace and founder and president of Miami based Eastern Air Lines the causeway provides access to the Miami Seaquarium the University of Miami Rosenstiel School of Marine and Atmospheric Science MAST Academy Virginia Key Park and Miami Marine Stadium on Virginia Key and to Crandon Park the Village of Key Biscayne and Bill Baggs Cape Florida State Park on the island of Key Biscayne History Edit Rickenbacker Causeway 2014 The Applied Marine Physics Building at the University of Miami s Rosenstiel School of Marine and Atmospheric Science located off Rickenbacker Causeway on Virginia Key September 2007 View of Downtown Miami from the bridgeTalk of a bridge to Key Biscayne inspired by the bridges connecting Miami to Miami Beach started in 1926 The northern two thirds of Key Biscayne was owned by William John W J Matheson who had established a coconut plantation on the island In February 1926 Matheson entered into an agreement with land developer D P Davis to develop and re sell the northern half of Key Biscayne including all of what is now Crandon Park and about half of the present Village of Key Biscayne Later in 1926 the City of Coral Gables incorporated with Key Biscayne included in its boundaries There were dreams of a bridge to the island making Key Biscayne the seaside resort for Coral Gables that Miami Beach had become for Miami Obstacles to the project soon appeared In March 1926 the U S government auctioned off some lots on Key Biscayne that had been retained when the rest of the island was transferred to the State of Florida The Mathesons wanted to have clear title to all of their land and determined to outbid other interested parties for the land They ended up paying US 58 055 for a total of 6 84 acres 2 77 ha of land a record price per acre for the auction of U S government land up to that date Then on September 18 1926 the Great Miami Hurricane crossed over Key Biscayne on its way to Miami While there were no deaths on the island most of the buildings on Key Biscayne were destroyed or badly damaged and many of the plantings were lost including half of the coconut trees D P Davis was not able to meet his end of the contract he declared bankruptcy and then disappeared en route to Europe by ship The Florida Land Boom was over as were plans for a bridge William Matheson died in 1930 leaving the island to his children There was a flurry of interest in 1939 when the U S Navy approved a proposal to develop Virginia Key as an air base and sea port There was even talk of putting an air base on the north end of Key Biscayne as well In 1940 William Matheson s heirs donated 808 8 acres 327 3 ha of land including two miles 3 2 km of beach on the Atlantic Ocean on the northern end of Key Biscayne to Dade County to be used as a public park Crandon Park The county commissioner who negotiated the gift Charles H Crandon had offered for the county to build a causeway to Key Biscayne in exchange for the land donation Planning for the air and sea complex on Virginia Key was still proceeding and construction on a causeway to Virginia Key started in 1941 The Attack on Pearl Harbor and the entry of the United States into World War II stopped all work on the causeway and the development of Virginia Key After the war Crandon pushed on with the project He got financier Ed Ball to buy 6 million worth of bonds financing the construction of the causeway Land for the toll plaza and the causeway entrance was bought from the estate of James Deering Fill dredged from the bottom of Biscayne Bay and dug from the mainland were used as both the road bed and public beach areas both to the west of Virginia Beach and on the southern reaches of the island In November 1947 the Rickenbacker Causeway 1 2 miles 1 9 km of bridges and 2 7 miles 4 3 km of roadway on fill finally opened 9 In the late 1960s and 1970s the sites along the Rickenbacker Causeway continued to increase in popularity After increasing in the mid 1960 because of the American television series Flipper attendance to the Miami Seaquarium soared in 1968 when it started to display Hugo its first killer whale two years later Lolita became their second The two killer whales performed together until Hugo s death in 1980 Shortly afterward Planet Ocean a themed tourist attraction opened its doors Newly integrated beaches were often crowded the causeway near the drawbridge across the Intracoastal Waterway and bridgeway near the mainland became favorite fishing spots But popularity had a price by 1980 it became evident that the concrete and steel structures supporting the roadway west of Virginia Key needed replacement Five years later the high rise William Powell Bridge and new bridging nearest the toll plaza were built and opened at a cost of 27 million With exception of the drawbridge which was removed the old bridging was left intact to serve as fishing piers 10 In 2011 the West Fishing Pier was demolished 11 Since the opening of the new bridge the MAST Academy took over the site of the defunct Planet Ocean the theme attraction closed in 1991 the Virginia Key site of the City of Miami s garbage dump became a Superfund site for cleanup the beach at Bill Baggs Cape Florida State Park was gaining in popularity but the Miami Marine Stadium has been virtually abandoned and the Miami Seaquarium has had a series of setbacks from being devastated by hurricanes Andrew 1992 and Wilma 2005 and being prevented from expanding by threats of legal action by the newly incorporated Village of Key Biscayne On the other hand the entire length of the causeway plus Crandon Boulevard have become part of a popular bicycling route from Key Biscayne to Florida City citation needed Cycling Edit According to the publication CityLab Miami Florida is not known as a bicycle friendly city It s listed as the fourth most dangerous city to bike in the U S between 2010 and 2014 47 people were killed cycling through the city Florida is the state with most cyclist fatalities per capita in United States the situation is just as bleak for pedestrians 12 Although bicycling is very popular on the Rickenbacker Causeway no physical division between the cars and bikes exist This lack of separation between bikes and cars excessive speeds and driving under the influence has contributed to at least four fatalities since 2006 This has spurred many cyclists to push for better bike lanes and barriers to protect them from the high speed traffic on the bridge Architect urban planner and lifelong cyclist Bernard Zyscovich saw an opportunity to promote cycling as a more viable means of transportation in Miami and launched Plan Z for Miami Plan Z For Miami envisions a separated partly elevated cycle track that would connect the mainland to the causeway bridge replacement and roadway elevation to account for future sea level rise as well as a new 20 acre park on Virginia Key created by shifting the roadway north This pro bono effort by Zyscovich was in response to the death of Aaron Cohen one of the four cyclists hit by cars on the Rickenbacker Causeway 13 It s necessary to clarify that Plan Z isn t just a bike path although that s perhaps the most striking part of the proposal As Zyscovich explains the Rickenbacker Causeway urgently needs structural renovations including more elevation to help it survive climate change There is sea level rise there is the replacement of the bridge there is a 20 acre new park says the architect The bicycle aspect is only one part of the bigger project But bicycle safety is the basis for beginning to think about it 14 The Rickenbacker Causeway and Crandon Boulevard are Miami Dade s most popular bike routes for avid cyclists 15 The path would then run along the William Powell Bridge providing an observation deck for viewing the Miami skyline then continue on to Virginia Key Zyscovich s plan also imagines a 20 acre waterfront park and beach at the entrance of Virginia Key with a branch of paths connecting to Virginia Key Park before continuing on to Key Biscayne Zyscovich thinks that Plan Z can kickstart a cultural change in the city The project could join two other proposed infrastructure projects a linear park called the Underline and the Ludlam Trail a rails to trail multi use path I think that what we are presenting is a concept large enough to contribute to creating a network the architect says If we can implement Plan Z the Underline and the Ludlam Trail we are going to have thousands of users that will then become the advocacy group to demand more bicycle infrastructure 16 In May 2017 Miami Dade County reclaimed land on Rickenbacker Causeway to help keep the Plan Z For Miami plan alive The Miami Herald reported in May 2017 17 As of May 2022 Plan Z is in the limbo after receiving very significant backslash from the Key Biscayne community as it incurs in an up to 80 year rights forfeiture to the Plan Z developers thus creating many uncertainties for the residents of the island who are not keen to have their only road to the mainland be dependent on a third party for no significant value to the island community References Edit Henry Cavendish 9 November 1947 Thousands to See Official Dedication of Causeway Park The Miami Daily News Retrieved 31 May 2012 American Map Florida State Road Atlas 2003 ISBN 0 87530 450 8 Rickenbacker Causeway Toll Increases A Quarter To Pay For Bear Cut Bridge Repairs The Huffington Post 24 January 2013 Retrieved 14 April 2013 Miami Dade County Online Services Rickenbacker Causeway Miami Dade County The Miami and Rickenbacker may be privatized Some Miami Beach residents want out accessed Miami Herald Aug 5 2021 Cava KB Will Get Seat At Causeway Table Key Biscayne Independent accessed 8 5 2021 Florida Department of Transportation Official Florida Transportation Map 1998 Florida SouthEastRoads Florida 913 Blank Joan Gill 1996 Key Biscayne ISBN 1 56164 096 4 pp 153 162 Blank p 173 SFI CityLab Bloomberg http planzmiami com Can a Bike Bridge Finally Make Miami Safer for Cyclists Builder Magazine www builderonline com Archived from the original on 2017 03 15 Danish advocate of cycling as transportation visits to help Copenhagenize Miami Miami Herald Miami Herald Archived from the original on 2017 03 03 CityLab Bloomberg County reclaims Rickenbacker Causeway property from Miami to preserve Plan Z Miami Herald Miami Herald Archived from the original on 2017 05 09 25 44 01 N 80 09 45 W 25 7335608 N 80 1623748 W 25 7335608 80 1623748 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Rickenbacker Causeway amp oldid 1149492743, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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