Historic
bridge inspected, future unknown
Caption
By PJ Callahan, KP News
While recent roadwork
on the Purdy Bridge only restricted traffic
for one six-hour period, the future of the
historic bridge is unknown. Drivers on State
Route 302 experienced short delays as traffic
was limited to one way on June 22 from 4 a.m. to
9 a.m. The work, originally scheduled until 3
p.m., was completed in half the time, which
avoided more serious delays.
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A worker directs
traffic during the June 22 bridge
inspection work.
Photo by Karina Whitmarsh |
“Traffic was starting to
build right around 9 a.m., but the crews were
able to open it back up and traffic dissipated,”
said Emily Pace with Washington State Department
of Transportation Communications.
The work allowed for
guardrail replacement after an oversized truck
struck the guardrail earlier in the year. The
WSDOT also took advantage of the closure to
perform a biennial inspection of the span. The
last inspection was held on July 20, 2006.
According to Chris Keegan, Olympic region
operations engineer, “There was no change from
the last inspection that was done in 2006.”
“The bridge is both functionally obsolete (the
roadway is only 20 feet wide from curb to curb)
and structurally deficient with a sufficiency
rating of 23.45 [out of 100 percent]. It is
structurally deficient for design and condition.
The bridge was designed to carry lighter loads
back in 1936 than we design for today,” he said.
“The piers out in the water have some condition
problems. In the tidal zone, the concrete has
been alternately soaked with salt water and then
exposed to the air for over 72 years. This has
allowed salt water and chlorides to get through
the concrete and into the outer layer of steel
reinforcing. The concrete over the rusty
reinforcing has broken off and some of the
reinforcing bars have rusted away. The
inspection has a repair listed to clean off
these two piers and then encase the damaged
concrete with new concrete and epoxy coated
reinforcing.”
The historic Purdy Bridge
spans the strait between Henderson Bay and
Burley Lagoon. This stretch of highway averages
12,000 vehicles daily, WSDOT statistics show
According to the WSDOT Website, the bridge is a
reinforced concrete box girder-style bridge. At
550 feet long, it was considered the longest
bridge of its kind when it was built. This type
of bridge was known for its low cost and simple,
graceful design. The bridge is on the National
Register of Historic Places. Given historic
nature, dederal requirements must be completed
before rehabilitating or removing the bridge.
When asked whether repairs might be made soon,
Keegan said, “This work is beyond what our
maintenance personnel can do. It is having to
compete with other bridge repair work throughout
the state and is not currently a funded project.
There are more bridges with a greater need for
repair in Washington than the Purdy Spit Bridge.
The bridge is old, tired and obsolete, but still
has a lot of life in it. Even with its current
condition, it will give many more years of
service.”
WSDOT updated a 1993 SR-302 Corridor Study in
February 2008. The study was commissioned by the
Washington State Legislature as part of the
Transportation Partnership Funding Package (9.5
percent gas tax). The report includes corridor
alternatives meant to offer “all reasonable
options for travel between SR-16 and SR-3.”
Several alternatives would affect the current
Purdy Bridge, including replacing the existing
bridge or building a new one parallel to the
existing bridge and widening the roadway across
the spit. Other options would move the corridor
farther north.
According to the report, “All of the potential
bridge crossing locations of the Burley Lagoon
would require long span lengths and high columns
due to the crossing distance and steep grades on
the west side approaches. This would result in
high costs for any new bridge. Requirements for
bridge piers in the water would also be
challenging to permit due to potential impacts
to aquatic resources.” One of the next steps,
according to WSDOT, will be to narrow the
alternatives based on fatal flaws, unreasonable
costs and unreasonable impacts, such as
extremely high impacts to wetlands and marine
areas or businesses and homes.
The study will move forward using the federal
National Environmental Policy Act process. As
part of this effort, WSDOT will soon convene an
advisory committee of local residents
representing a broad range of community
interests. For more information about this group
and the SR-302 Corridor Study, visit
www.wsdot.wa.gov/projects/SR302/NewCorridor.