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New Church Avenue Bridge Opens
New Bridge Has Parking, Sidewalks and a Bike Path
Knoxville, Tenn. – The Tennessee Department of Transportation (TDOT)
today announced the Church Avenue Bridge in downtown Knoxville is now open
to traffic. In a ribbon cutting ceremony, state and local officials opened
the new bridge that spans James White Parkway and Central Avenue. The
previous bridge, built in 1926, was demolished in December 2006.
The new Church Avenue Bridge has two lanes of traffic with 31 spaces of
metered public parking on the south side, a seven-foot sidewalk on either
side and a bike path on the north side. The structure includes new
decorative lighting and concrete railings which are similar in design to the
original bridge. Approximately 3,200 motorists used the 81-year-old Church
Street Bridge each day before its demolition.
“The new Church Avenue Bridge is a beautiful addition to downtown
Knoxville and is a much better structure than the old bridge. It will serve
motorists, pedestrians and bicyclists well into the future,” said TDOT
Commissioner Gerald Nicely.
The Church Avenue Bridge was added to the SmartFIX40 project at the
request of the City of Knoxville to take advantage of nearby road closures
and to achieve cost efficiency.
“The bridge is an important link in and out of downtown and we are very
pleased the bridge will be opened to traffic before the first home UT
football game,” said Knoxville Mayor Bill Haslam. “This bridge can
accommodate many modes of transportation, not just vehicles. It’s exciting
that pedestrians, bicycles and cars all will have designated travel lanes on
the bridge.”
SmartFIX40 is TDOT’s single most expensive, one time construction project
in its 90-year history. Broken into two separate construction contracts,
SmartFIX40 has a price tag of approximately $190 million. SmartFIX40 is an
accelerated construction process used by the department to speed up highway
construction. The process involves closing the primary roadway to allow
around-the-clock work that is uninterrupted by traffic in order to
dramatically shorten the time it takes to complete the project, thereby
reducing the long-term inconvenience to motorists. The SmartFIX40 project
will save over two years of construction time.
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