Broadway Bridge won't open this week after all, official says

Next one likelier after rain snags opening

Scott Bennett, director of the Arkansas Highway and Transportation Department, takes the ceremonial first drive across the Broadway Bridge over the Arkansas River on Monday afternoon. The bridge now is predicted to open to vehicle traffic next week at the earliest.
Scott Bennett, director of the Arkansas Highway and Transportation Department, takes the ceremonial first drive across the Broadway Bridge over the Arkansas River on Monday afternoon. The bridge now is predicted to open to vehicle traffic next week at the earliest.

The state's top highway official says the new Broadway Bridge won't open to traffic this week after all.

The Arkansas Highway and Transportation Department announced Wednesday that the new bridge over the Arkansas River between Little Rock and North Little Rock likely would be completed to the point that traffic would be allowed to cross it this week.

But the agency held out the possibility that unforeseen circumstances could alter that schedule, which is why Scott Bennett said traffic won't be allowed to cross the bridge until next week at the earliest.

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Photos by Brandon Riddle

"We are hoping that ... it will probably be the early part of next week," Bennett, the director of the Arkansas Highway and Transportation Department, said Monday. "Originally we were thinking the latter part of this week. The rain has put us behind a little bit."

[BROADWAY BRIDGE: Videos + traffic map, cameras, previous coverage, photos here]

Bennett spoke at an impromptu news conference Monday in the middle of the bridge over the Arkansas River amid the ongoing construction associated with the $98.6 million project.

The contractor, Massman Construction Co. of Kansas City, Mo., is racing against a 180-day clock that expires March 29 in which it had to close the old bridge to traffic, remove it, build the new one and open it to traffic.

"You can see it is not quite finished yet," Bennett said. "They have to finish a little work on the pavement. They have to stripe it. We don't really want to paint stripes on the pavement when it's wet. It won't stick. We will get this open as absolutely as soon as possible."

One tarp-covered section of the south approach to the bridge had concrete repoured and will need several days to cure, highway officials said.

Bennett didn't foresee any delays beyond next week, which will be about three weeks before the 180-day deadline. The detours now directing traffic around the bridge closure will remain in place until that time.

"I do feel very confident in saying it's going to be in less than six months," he said.

The Little Rock area has seen some periods of rain in the past few days. More rain is forecast for today and Wednesday.

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The contract included a clause to dock Massman $80,000 for every full day it went past that 180 days, and incentives of $80,000 for every day it opened ahead of schedule. While there is a 50-day cap on payments for finishing early, there is no cap on a potential penalty.

The $80,000 is what the department calculated as the daily road-user costs for the project. Road-user costs are the estimated financial impact the project will have on motorists. The figure is based on a formula that takes into consideration traffic volume, delays and other factors.

Before it closed at the end of September, the bridge carried about 25,000 vehicles daily.

The old bridge was completed in 1923 at a cost of just under $1 million. The department began planning to replace the bridge about eight years ago, concluding that although it remained safe for traffic, the cost to maintain the bridge as it continued to age would outweigh the cost to replace it.

The Highway Department originally proposed a Broadway Bridge design that's similar to the Main Street Bridge, but local leaders persuaded the department to incorporate two basket-handle arches into the design. Pulaski County committed $20 million to cover the extra cost. Local leaders say the basket-handle span will become a distinctive landmark in the region.

"Massman Construction has done a great job," Bennett said. "Our crews have done a great job in making sure everything is really ready to go. As you can see, it is going to be a great addition to Little Rock, North Little Rock and Pulaski County."

Bennett reiterated that even after the bridge opens to traffic, work on the structure won't be completed for several more weeks.

Vehicles will be able to cross the river north and south, but more work is needed to complete the southbound off-ramp that will carry traffic to westbound LaHarpe Boulevard, also called Arkansas 10.

It's also expected to take several weeks for Massman workers to complete ramps on both sides of the river to connect the 16-foot, shared-use path with the Arkansas River Trail for pedestrians and cyclists.

Announcements on those aspects of the project will be made as the work progresses, the department said.

Also, after the bridge reopens to traffic, motorists can expect occasional lane closures on the span as the contractor wraps up parts of the project. The lane closures will occur on weekends and at non-peak morning and afternoon commute times, the department said.

Bennett was on the bridge as part of a ceremonial first drive across to bring attention to the project's status, which was a repeat of a similar occasion when the original bridge was built, he said.

Bennett, driving his state-owned sports utility vehicle, led a small convoy that included Dick Trammel of Rogers, chairman of the Arkansas Highway Commission; three of the four other commission members -- Tom Schueck of Little Rock, Robert S. Moore Jr. of Arkansas City and Alec Farmer of Jonesboro -- Mayors Mark Stodola of Little Rock and Joe Smith of North Little Rock and three Pulaski County justices of the peace -- Donna Massey and Judy Green, both of Little Rock, and Phil Stowers of Maumelle.

"Smooth, it was really smooth," Stodola said of the first drive across the bridge.

A formal ribbon-cutting and commissioning of the bridge will be held at 4 p.m.on April 6 in the west parking lot across from Dickey-Stephens Park in North Little Rock. The public is invited to participate.

The date was selected because it is the 100th anniversary of the day the United States formally declared war on German Empire in World War I. The old bridge was dedicated to Arkansas veterans of the first world war and the new bridge will be dedicated to military veterans of all wars.

A Section on 02/28/2017



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