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Governor Thomas Johnson Bridge

113 bytes added, 21:20, 7 December 2008
Problems: Added photo.
The Thomas Johnson Bridge itself can be categorized as both a beam bridge and an arch bridge. Massive concrete pilings hold the bridge up over the river.
[[Image:Thomas-Johnson-bridge-2.jpg|right|thumbnail|These braces were installed in 1988 to prevent the piers from failing. The highest piers have significantly more braces than shown here.]]
==Problems==
 
In the summer of 1988, cracks were found in the foundation of the Thomas Johnson Bridge, causing it to be closed for repairs over several months.<ref>{{cite web
|url=http://www.highbeam.com/doc/1P2-1263729.html
People wishing to travel north into [[Calvert County]] were forced to make a half-hour detour to the [[Benedict Bridge]]. People wishing to travel south into [[St. Mary's County, Maryland|St. Mary's County]] were likewise forced to either utilize the [[Benedict Bridge]] or take a free charter boat across the [[Patuxent River]] to a park and ride lot on the southern side.
[[As of September 2007]], there has been much talk and public debate over either expanding the Thomas Johnson Bridge by adding a parallel span, or replacing the bridge with a four-lane bridge all together. The reasons for such proposals are two-fold. First, the recent increase in the amount of traffic of commuters traveling to and from the [[Naval Air Station Patuxent River|Patuxent River Naval Air Station]] in [[Lexington Park, Maryland|Lexington Park]] has made the the two-lane, single span bridge outdated for all intents and purposes. Traffic on the bridge during [[rush hour]] can cause back-ups all the way back to the [[Maryland Route 235|Route 235]] intersection, and instances where there is an accident on the bridge itself can cause total gridlock.{{fact|date=September 2007}}
Secondly, the fear of more structural issues of the Thomas Johnson Bridge arising (such as the one in 1988), coupled with the apparent over-capacity use of the bridge on a daily basis, has caused some safety concerns about the bridge's stability.<ref>{{cite web
|publisher=Baltimore Sun
}}</ref>
These fears have grown substantially in the wake of the [[I-35W Mississippi River Bridge]] collapse in [[Minneapolis]] on August 1, 2007.[[As of September 2007]], a study to determine whether the bridge should be expanded or replaced is being debated by [[Maryland]] governmental officials.{{fact|date=September 2007}}
==References==

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