General Information
Completion: | 10 March 1992 |
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Status: | in use |
Project Type
Structure: |
Through truss bridge |
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Function / usage: |
Motorway bridge / freeway bridge |
Material: |
Steel bridge |
Structure: |
Continuous truss bridge |
Support conditions: |
for registered users |
Location
Location: |
Charleston, Charleston County, South Carolina, USA Berkeley County, South Carolina, USA |
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Crosses: |
|
Carries: |
|
Coordinates: | 32° 53' 27.97" N 79° 57' 47.36" W |
Technical Information
Dimensions
main span | 244.00 m | |
length of side spans | 2 x 122.00 m |
Cost
cost of construction | United States dollar 20 000 000 |
Materials
truss |
steel
|
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Excerpt from Wikipedia
The Don N. Holt Bridge is a parallel chord, three-span continuous, modified Warren-type truss bridge that carries Interstate 526 (I-526) over the Cooper River between Charleston and North Charleston. It was built in 1992 by the South Carolina Department of Transportation and was designed by HNTB Corporation.
The bridge provides a connection between the communities east of the Cooper River, including Mount Pleasant and Daniel Island, to North Charleston and I-26. It is part of a major hurricane evacuation route for the area.
The Don Holt Bridge is adjacent to a Kapstone (formerly MeadWestvaco) paper mill. In the mid 1980s, prior to construction of the bridge, owners of the mill filed a lawsuit to stop the bridge because the bridge deck would be at the same height as smokestacks from the mill. In certain weather conditions, the smokestacks produce a fog which could blind drivers and place the mill at risk for lawsuits from drivers. The lawsuit was settled by mandating that a road weather information system (RWIS) be included in the bridge project. The RWIS was designed to detect reduced visibility on the bridge and "to inform drivers of dense fog conditions, reduce traffic speeds, and guide vehicles safely through the fog-prone area." The system uses variable-message signs and illuminating pavement lights (similar to a runway centerline lighting system). As of May 2003, there were no fog-related crashes.
The bridge was named for Don N. Holt who served in the South Carolina House of Representatives and was in the insurance business.
Text imported from Wikipedia article "Don N. Holt Bridge" and modified on November 4, 2021 according to the CC-BY-SA 4.0 International license.
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data sheet - Structure-ID
20002372 - Published on:
17/11/2001 - Last updated on:
05/02/2016