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FHWA 20-04i
Contact: Doug Hecox
202-366-0660
Monday, November 01, 2004
U.S. DOT Grant to Help Fund Replacement of Two Bridges Near Ames, Iowa
Two new Federal Highway Administration grants, totaling $600,000, will help
replace two narrow bridges near Ames and Des Moines, IA, said U.S.
Transportation Secretary Norman Y. Mineta.
“Replacing these bridges will ensure the continued safety and vitality of Boone
and Madison Counties,” said Secretary Mineta. “Our roads are safer than ever
before and today we’re putting a down payment on even safer roads.”
One of the grants announced today will help replace the existing 87-year-old
one-lane bridge over Squaw Creek south of Ames with a wider two-lane bridge
capable of supporting vehicles heavier than its current 15-ton limit. The other
grant will help replace a similarly narrow 60-year-old bridge north of Des
Moines.
The projects, estimated to cost $835,000 and to be completed in under a year,
will feature more durable construction and improved pavement markings. Both
projects will rely on Accelerated Construction Technology to cut construction
time by up to 60 percent. The shortened construction time will lower exposure of
the public to work zones and traffic detours and allow normal traffic to resume
sooner.
Neither of the bridges being replaced is one of Iowa’s historic “covered”
bridges made famous in Robert James Waller’s novel, “The Bridges of Madison
County,” later made into a motion picture.
“Farming areas like these depend on a reliable roadway system and these grants
will make it easier for Iowans to keep people, goods and opportunity moving
through these two counties,” said Federal Highway Administrator Mary E. Peters.
Since 1991, the FHWA has provided funds to states seeking to improve the safety,
longevity or utility of key bridges with innovative materials or designs.
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