US Grant Bridge
US-23 Ohio River Crossing At Portsmouth
Portsmouth, Ohio

Under Construction

• Bridge US Grant Bridge
• Structure ID Unknown
• City Portsmouth
• State Ohio
• Country USA
• Carries US-23
• Crosses Ohio River
• Date Opened October 16, 2006
• Total Length 2,155 Feet
• Longest Span 875 Feet
• Tower Height 292 Feet
• Deck Width 66 Feet
• Number Of Lanes 2
• Number Of Spans 1
• Height Above Water 56 Feet
• Traffic Count Unknown
The US-23 Ohio River crossing is an important crossing for the local economy, but it is not a high volume crossing. As a result, a two lane road is more than sufficient. The new US Grant Bridge is just that, a very modern, economical, and functional two lane bridge.

All cable stayed bridges differ in one way or another. The US Grant Bridge is unique in several aspects. First, the cables join the support towers from a structure at the very top of the towers. In most cable stayed bridges, the cables attach up the sides of the towers. Second, the towers are each a single vertical column, whereas other cable stayed towers are large H, A, or event inverted Y forms. Third, the towers come up through the middle of the deck, whereas most cable stayed bridges have the towers to the outside, in the middle between two spans. Finally, there is very little structure for the bridge deck connected to the towers. The steel deck connects to a single concrete member at the tower, with 4 stay cables set nearly vertical at each tower. The result is that most of the deck weight is transferred through the cables rather than directly to the towers.

The new bridge was planned to be complete in 2004, but construction delays and a project redesign set it back two years. There was no single reason, rather, a series of small items that built up over time. This included unexpected material located under one of the footings, a change order on the steel, a barge that sank carrying one of the cranes, bad weather, and the need for a very detailed erection plans for the steel. The local population was somewhat upset about the delays given that the old bridge had been removed before the new bridge was open. That problem was mitigated by the existence of the Carl Perkins bridge that was only a mile away, however, the roadway to that bridge diverted traffic away from the downtown business area.

The old bridge was a 1927 era two lane pure suspension bridge. The bridge deteriorated to the point where it was no longer economically feasible to repair the structure. Both bridges are named in honor of General U.S. Grant, the Civil War hero and 18th US President.


Under Construction

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Photo and text by John A. Weeks III, Copyright © 2006, all rights reserved.
For further information, contact: john@johnweeks.com