


I've wondered why concrete is the only solution being considered for the driving surface. What about a steel road deck? Either a textured steel plate like this:dbInSouthCity wrote:robo bump?
anyway- this bridge is a pain to deal with because of the steel plates under the driving surface...its been studied by universities all over the world since the 80s, i think they finally found the right concrete mix that will stick. summer 2016 will be a busy one on PSB, between last summer and 2016 summer about $75M worth of work (half paid by IDOT) should give the bridge another 50 years of life vs a $300-400M new bridge.... also the westbound is getting picked up a slide over 10 feet to the north and a new lane built in-between the west and east bounds.
Where's that information coming from?addxb2 wrote: ↑Jul 11, 2025Mention of Poplar Bridge rebuild in 2030s. What style of river bridge do we think would look good on St. Louis?
Freightway 2025 Priority Projects pages 80 to 81. That said, I brought it up because Ryan McClure from Arch Park Foundation also brought it up recently when discussing the reconnection efforts. It would be a 2030-2040 project if I had to guess.
So I guess the goal would be to reduce the number of supports in the river traffic lane and have it more like the Stan Musial Bridge?addxb2 wrote: ↑Jul 12, 2025Freightway 2025 Priority Projects pages 80 to 81. That said, I brought it up because Ryan McClure from Arch Park Foundation also brought it up recently when discussing the reconnection efforts. It would be a 2030-2040 project if I had to guess.
Seems like there's plenty of underutilized land already available in DT. Probably better uses of $$ elsewhere.kg2024 wrote: ↑Aug 14, 2025Any ideas of what the lifespan of the double decker Poplar St viaduct going west to 20th St. is? If a new Mississippi River bridge is on the horizon would it be smart to rethink this entire corridor? I quickly mocked up what a realigned I 64 route through downtown could look like that pushes it further south above the freight railyard and consolidates exits to major N/S corridors. This would reconnect the lost street grid and open up large areas adjacent to Busch Stadium and downtown to redevelopment (shown in light green).
Including space on the bridge for future high speed rail that could drop down to a redesigned Gateway Transit Center could also be smart. Other things I considered include realigning and tunneling part of MetroLink between Civic Center and Stadium stations to make more usable development space and I also imagined I44 ending at the new river bridge and continuing north as a boulevard, while still depressing under the Arch entry plaza.
Yes there's definitely plenty of space available, but if this whole stretch needs to be rebuilt anyway in the next 20+ years would the extra planning and benefits outweigh the restrictions and cost of trying to rebuild the structure in the same place and the extended timeline that would bring? If hundreds of millions are going to be spent, wouldn''t reconstructing it all at once in a more consolidated footprint be more logical?Bart Harley Jarvis wrote: ↑Aug 14, 2025Seems like there's plenty of underutilized land already available in DT. Probably better uses of $$ elsewhere.kg2024 wrote: ↑Aug 14, 2025Any ideas of what the lifespan of the double decker Poplar St viaduct going west to 20th St. is? If a new Mississippi River bridge is on the horizon would it be smart to rethink this entire corridor? I quickly mocked up what a realigned I 64 route through downtown could look like that pushes it further south above the freight railyard and consolidates exits to major N/S corridors. This would reconnect the lost street grid and open up large areas adjacent to Busch Stadium and downtown to redevelopment (shown in light green).
Including space on the bridge for future high speed rail that could drop down to a redesigned Gateway Transit Center could also be smart. Other things I considered include realigning and tunneling part of MetroLink between Civic Center and Stadium stations to make more usable development space and I also imagined I44 ending at the new river bridge and continuing north as a boulevard, while still depressing under the Arch entry plaza.






