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Greenville Bridge

Greenville Bridge
Mississippi River bridge at Greenville MS - Lake Village AR.jpg
The nearly completed bridge, viewed from the Arkansas side (October 2009)
Coordinates 33°17′14″N 91°09′15″W / 33.28722°N 91.15417°W / 33.28722; -91.15417Coordinates: 33°17′14″N 91°09′15″W / 33.28722°N 91.15417°W / 33.28722; -91.15417
Carries 4 lanes of US 82 / US 278
Crosses Mississippi River
Locale Refuge, Mississippi and Shives, Arkansas
Characteristics
Design Cable-stayed bridge
Total length 13,560 feet (4,133 m)
Width 88 feet (27 m)
Longest span 1,378 feet (420 m)
Clearance below 122 feet (37 m)
History
Opened August 4, 2010 (2010-08-04)
Greenville Bridge is located in Arkansas
Greenville Bridge
Greenville Bridge
Location in Arkansas

The Greenville Bridge is a cable-stayed bridge over the Mississippi River, in the United States, carrying US 82 and US 278 between Refuge, Mississippi and Shives, Arkansas. When it opened in 2010, it was the fourth-longest cable-stayed bridge in North America.

The Benjamin G. Humphreys Bridge, the first bridge to connect the two towns, had become functionally obsolete. Its narrow road had only two lanes with no shoulders. Because of its location near a sharp bend in the Mississippi River, the bridge had become a hazard to river traffic; barges and towboats frequently collided with it. In 1994, a study concluded that a new bridge was needed and the old one should be torn down. Construction was begun in 2001 and the new bridge opened in 2010. In 2011, the process of removing the old bridge began.

Opened in 2010, the Greenville Bridge carries US 82/US 278 over the Mississippi River between Refuge, Mississippi and Shives, Arkansas. It is located 0.5 miles (0.80 km) down river from the original bridge, built in 1940. Designed by HNTB, it is a four-lane cable-stayed bridge with more than 2.5 miles (4.0 km) of bridge deck straddled by two concrete towers 425 feet (130 m) feet high and anchored by concrete piers planted 120 feet (37 m) below the riverbed. It has four fans of strand steel cable connected to the top of the towers which support the deck.


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