Osteen Bridge Explained

Osteen Bridge
Official Name:Douglas Stenstrom Bridge
Id:790124
790219
Locale:Indian Mound Village, Florida
Maint:Florida Department of Transportation
Carries:
(4 general purpose lanes)
Crosses:St. Johns River
Design:Steel-reinforced concrete
Open:April 1977
Coordinates:28.8026°N -81.2102°W

The Douglas Stenstrom Bridge, also known as the Osteen Bridge, is a steel-and-concrete bridge located in Indian Mound Village, Florida, east of Sanford, that carries State Road 415 over the St. Johns River. The current bridge was completed in 1977, replacing a 1920s vintage bridge that was considered the most dangerous in the state; a second parallel span was completed in 2015.

History

The original Osteen Bridge, a hand-turned swing bridge,[1] was built in the 1920s;[2] it was rebuilt in 1947. The bridge is located just upstream from Lake Monroe,[3] crossing the Indian Mound Slu portion of the river between Lake Monroe and Lake Jesup; by the 1970s the original bridge, only in width, proved dangerous and too narrow for continued use, being described as "the worst bridge in Florida" in 1972.[4] In 1973, mats of invasive water hyacinth caused damage to the bridge's structure.[5]

An accident in 1974 that killed five people when their van was run off the bridge by a truck gave the final impetus to the construction of a new bridge, replacing the dangerous older span.[6] The new Osteen Bridge was constructed starting in 1975, with work continuing through 1976 and early 1977;[1] constructed by the Houdaille-Duval-Wright company of Jacksonville,[7] the project cost approximately $2.6 million USD.[1] The new bridge opened in April 1977, and was officially named the Douglas Stenstrom Bridge in 1978, after a Florida state senator Douglas Stenstrom who had pushed for the completion of the project.[2] Part of the previous bridge was left in place, serving as a fishing pier.[8]

Repairs to the bridge were undertaken during 2011.[9] A second parallel bridge was completed in 2015 to support the widening of SR 415 to 2 lanes in each direction.[10]

References

Citations
  • Bibliography
  • External links

    Notes and References

    1. News: Osteen Bridge Work On Time. Weber. Dave. September 14, 1976. Daytona Beach Morning Journal. 2B. 2012-09-07. Daytona Beach, FL.
    2. News: Osteen Bridge Dedicated. August 18, 1978. Daytona Beach Morning Journal. 1B. 2012-09-07. Daytona Beach, FL.
    3. Belleville 2000, p.56.
    4. News: New Osteen Bridge Hearing Tonight. February 28, 1972. Daytona Beach Morning Journal. 3. 2012-09-07. Daytona Beach, FL.
    5. Web site: Timeline of the Major Events in the Aquatic Plant Control Program. July 31, 2012. U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. 2012-09-07.
    6. News: Osteen Bridge Moving Along. Weber. Dave. October 10, 1975. Daytona Beach Morning Journal. 1B. 2012-09-07. Daytona Beach, FL.
    7. News: Work To Start On New Osteen Bridge. July 9, 1975. Daytona Beach Morning Journal. 2B. 2012-09-07. Daytona Beach, FL.
    8. McCarthy 2008, p.15.
    9. Web site: DOT to repair Osteen Bridge. May 9, 2011. The Sanford Herald. 2012-09-07. Sanford, FL. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20160304045919/http://mysanfordherald.com/bookmark/13181478-DOT-to-repair-Osteen-Bridge. March 4, 2016.
    10. Web site: Daytona Beach News-Journal . S.R. 415 widening project makes progress . Harper . Mark . November 12, 2013.