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Monday, July 12, 2004
Contact: Brian C. Keeter, 202/366-0660
FHWA 9-04
Federal Highway Administrator and ARC Co-Chair Tour Blennerhassett Island
Bridge Project, Highlight Plans to Speed Construction and Reduce Cost
Federal Highway Administrator Mary E. Peters and Appalachian Regional Commission
Co-Chair Anne B. Pope today toured the Blennerhassett Island Bridge project near
Parkersburg to get a progress report on plans that will speed construction and
reduce the cost of the new bridge by $50 million.
“Building the Blennerhassett Island Bridge as quickly as possible is key to
rolling more prosperity and opportunity into West Virginia and the region,” said
Peters. “The Blennerhassett Island Bridge is the final link in a vital highway
connecting people throughout Appalachia to their jobs and families.”
Early plans called for a suspension bridge spanning Blennerhassett Island at an
estimated cost of more than $140 million. The Federal Highway Administration,
ARC and the West Virginia Department of Transportation worked closely together
to develop a new, less complicated bridge design. The new design will save
taxpayers at least $50 million and speed construction by about a year.
The Blennerhassett Island Bridge will complete the last remaining section in the
roughly 300-mile Corridor D of the Appalachian Development Highway System (ADHS).
The four-lane divided highway will stretch from Cincinnati, Ohio, to Bridgeport,
W. Va., providing greater mobility and safety to thousands of motorists.
“President Bush is committed to completing the ADHS,” said Pope. “The 84 percent
of the system already complete is helping to grow good jobs and stimulate
economic development. We want people living and working along corridors D and H
to share in those economic opportunities.”
Peters and Pope will spend two days in the state visiting the Blennerhassett
Island Bridge and other projects administered by the FHWA along the ADHS. They
are visiting Corridor D between Parkersburg and Clarksburg and Corridor H from
Weston to the Virginia state line.
Peters expressed strong support for the Appalachian Highway System and other
transportation investments in West Virginia. The Bush administration’s
transportation bill authorizes $2.7 billion for the ADHS, an overall increase in
program funding.
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