West Seattle Bridge opens early; SDOT crews took barriers down Saturday night
West Seattle Bridge opens early; SDOT crews took barriers down Saturday night
We were there at the moment it opened
The West Seattle Bridge opened early on Saturday night just after 9pm after a 909 day closure.
Photo by Kevin Henry of Atomic Aerials
Sat, 09/17/2022
After 909 days the West Seattle Bridge is at long last open. It came as a bit of surprise since Seattle Department of Transportation staffers had said for weeks that it would open on Sunday Sept. 18.
But at 9:07 after some last minute street sweeping to clean up a bit of debris, SDOT crews took down the barriers and the road was clear.
Standing by near his Triumph motorcycle, Matt Swallwell, was ready and squeezed past two SDOT trucks to be the very first driver on the bridge. He was soon followed by other drivers who honked in celebration many of them clearly elated to be back on the newly repaired bridge.
SDOT crews were also out, taking down the detour signs and removing signage about restrictions on the lower swing bridge which is now open again.
Nine King County Metro bus routes will shift back to the West Seattle Bridge on Monday: routes 21/21X, 50, 55, 56, 57, 120, 125, and the RapidRide C Line. Metro expects the use of the high bridge to reduce travel time and improve reliability for riders between West Seattle and downtown Seattle.
These repair systems have prepared the bridge to handle the weight of vehicles and decades of seasonal temperature changes. With these repairs complete, the bridge is much stronger than it was before and will last for decades to come.
Recent tests demonstrated that the repairs were performing as expected and the bridge was strong enough to support the thousands of vehicles expected to cross it each day. SDOT’s engineers and bridge specialists will continue to closely monitor the bridge using cameras, sensors, and frequent in-person inspections.
During the repair process, crews installed permanent inspection platforms inside the bridge’s girders that will allow inspectors to examine the structure’s concrete easily. Crews also widened the left shoulder of the westbound lanes so that bridge inspectors can get inside the structure for frequent inspections without having to close a traffic lane.
In addition to repair work, SDOT took advantage of the closure to complete other kinds of bridge maintenance work. This work included replacing old expansion joints and sign structures, pouring a new concrete overlay on the Fauntleroy Expressway to the west of the bridge, and repouring worn concrete panels on the bridge’s western approach.