Charlestown High Bridge

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Charlestown_High_Bridge an entity of type: Thing

The Charlestown High Bridge (referred to as the John F. Fitzgerald Bridge on old AAA Tourbook maps) spanned the Charles River in Boston, Massachusetts and was part of I-93/US 1 at the north end of the Central Artery. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Charlestown High Bridge
rdf:langString Charlestown High Bridge
rdf:langString Old I-93 Charles River Bridge
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xsd:float -71.06246948242188
xsd:integer 520465
xsd:integer 1109431798
rdf:langString Charlestown High Bridge
rdf:langString The Charlestown High Bridge has been replaced by the now-complete Zakim Bunker Hill Bridge
xsd:integer 2004
rdf:langString double-decker Warren truss bridge
xsd:integer 20009366
rdf:langString
xsd:integer 13
xsd:integer 1954
xsd:string 42.369075 -71.062472
rdf:langString The Charlestown High Bridge (referred to as the John F. Fitzgerald Bridge on old AAA Tourbook maps) spanned the Charles River in Boston, Massachusetts and was part of I-93/US 1 at the north end of the Central Artery. This double-decked truss bridge, built in 1954, was to originally carry I-95 through Boston from southwest to northeast in tandem with the Tobin Bridge, built in 1950. The I-95 project and several other highway projects in and around Boston, including both the highly controversial Inner Belt (I-695) and the Southwest Corridor, completing the right-of-way intended to bring I-95 into Boston from Providence, Rhode Island, were cancelled due to heavy public opposition in the early 1970s. I-93 was allowed to be completed from the Yankee Division Highway (Route 128) to the foot of the Charlestown High Bridge in 1969, and the I-93 designation was extended onto the bridge and the Central Artery in the early 1970s. Originally intended to carry 75,000 vehicles per day in the 1950s, the Charlestown High Bridge carried upwards of 200,000 vehicles per day in the 1990s. For years, the bridge was a major traffic bottleneck that affected southbound commuters from Boston's North Shore and southern New Hampshire for miles. Travelling northbound, due to a poorly planned lane drop to accommodate incoming vehicles from Storrow Drive, traffic backups leading to the High Bridge threatened to cause hours of daily gridlock in downtown Boston. These problems were addressed in the planning and construction of the $14.6 billion Big Dig project. The cable-stayed Zakim Bunker Hill Bridge, which opened fully to traffic in December 2003, replaced the Charlestown High Bridge, which was demolished in 2004.
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xsd:gYear 2004
xsd:gYear 1954
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