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Washington Avenue Bridge (Minneapolis)

Washington Avenue Bridge
Washington Avenue Bridge Minneapolis.jpg
The Washington Avenue Bridge in Minneapolis, prior to the 2011-12 reconstruction, looking south from NP Bridge #9
Coordinates 44°58′24″N 93°14′21″W / 44.97333°N 93.23917°W / 44.97333; -93.23917
Carries Upper deck: Bicycles and pedestrians
Lower deck: County Road 122, one auto lane each direction and the METRO Green Line light rail
Crosses Mississippi River
Locale Minneapolis, Minnesota
Maintained by Hennepin County, Minnesota (1997–present)
Minnesota Department of Transportation (1965–1997)
ID number 9360
Characteristics
Design Plate girder bridge
Total length 1130 feet
Longest span 251 feet
Clearance below 70 feet
History
Opened 1965
Minneapolis Mississippi.svg
Bridges over the Mississippi in Minneapolis–St. Paul. Washington Ave. is about center on this image, between N. Pacific Bridge #9 and I-94.

Coordinates: 44°58′23.33″N 93°14′21.61″W / 44.9731472°N 93.2393361°W / 44.9731472; -93.2393361

The Washington Avenue Bridge carries County Road 122 and the METRO Green Line light rail across the Mississippi River in Minneapolis, Minnesota and connects the East Bank and West Bank portions of the University of Minnesota's main campus. The bridge has two decks, with the lower deck designated for motor vehicle traffic and light rail trains and the upper deck used for pedestrians and bicycles (lanes specifically for bikes are on the north side). It is a utilitarian structure with simple architecture, but it has cultural significance because thousands of students, faculty, staff, and visitors walk across it every day.

Most users of the bridge get across it using some mode other than a personal automobile. Mn/DOT traffic counts from 2007 show the bridge carried about 28,400 vehicles per day at that time. However, multiple counts from 2009 indicate the bridge carried a total of 71,400 people per day when other modes were also included. The greatest single mode was still motor vehicles at 37.6%, but 32.7% used bus transit, 19.9% walked, and 9.6% used bicycles, with a remaining 0.3% using other methods such as inline skating. The bridge is a cycling hot spot and, with 6,850 riders per day, may carry more bikes than any other route in Minneapolis.


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