Judge Perez Bridge

Judge Perez Bridge

View from car approaching the bridge's lift span. At right is an adjacent railroad bridge.
Coordinates 29°52′18.7″N 90°0′32.0″W / 29.871861°N 90.008889°W / 29.871861; -90.008889Coordinates: 29°52′18.7″N 90°0′32.0″W / 29.871861°N 90.008889°W / 29.871861; -90.008889
Carries 2 lanes of LA 23 North
Crosses Gulf Intracoastal Waterway
Locale Belle Chasse and Terrytown, Louisiana
Maintained by LaDOTD
Characteristics
Total length 2,654 feet
Longest span 150 feet
Clearance above 100 feet (open), 40 feet (closed)
History
Opened September 10, 1968

The Judge Perez Bridge, also known as the Belle Chasse Bridge, is a vertical-lift bridge in the U.S. state of Louisiana which carries northbound Louisiana Highway 23 over the Gulf Intracoastal Waterway between Belle Chasse and Terrytown. The bridge is paired with the Belle Chasse Tunnel which carries southbound LA 23. Construction began in March 1967, and the bridge opened for traffic in September 1968. It has been plagued with mechanical issues since it opened. It's always fun when commuters have to back down off the bridge due to a malfunction.

The bridge was built to relieve traffic from the Belle Chasse Tunnel. It was part of a parish project of four-laning Highway 23 throughout the road's entire length to Venice. According to the Plaquemines Gazette, the $3.3 million structure was built by Plaquemines Parish using its Parish Royalty Road Fund without charge to local taxpayers. Boh Brothers worked on its construction.[1]

References

  1. "Multi Million $ Intracoastal Waterway Bridge Dedicated", Plaquemines Gazette, September 13, 1968.


This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Sunday, March 13, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.