Bridge Name: | Gold Star Memorial Bridge |
Official Name: | Gold Star Memorial Bridge |
Locale: | New London, Connecticut and Groton, Connecticut |
Carries: | 11 lanes of, bikes/pedestrians |
Crosses: | Thames River |
Maint: | Connecticut Department of Transportation |
Open: | 1943 south span 1973 north span (twinned) |
Below: | 41.1frac=8NaNfrac=8 |
Design: | Twin Truss - Deck |
Length: | 1807.8frac=8NaNfrac=8 / 1941frac=8NaNfrac=8 |
Width: | 24.4frac=8NaNfrac=8 / 24.4frac=8NaNfrac=8 |
The Gold Star Memorial Bridge is a pair of steel truss bridges that carry both Interstate 95 and U.S. Route 1 across the Thames River between New London, Connecticut and Groton, Connecticut. The bridge is the largest structure in the state, with more than 1000000square feet of deck area, and the longest bridge in the state at 6000feet.[1] Its 11 highway lanes accommodate an average daily traffic of 117,000 vehicles.[2] The bridge is actually a set of twin bridges, but they are generally spoken of using the singular "bridge".
The current south span (northbound) of the bridge was completed in 1943 as a single span carrying traffic in both directions. It was part of Southeastern Connecticut's "free span" highway, a short 3.6miles long four-lane stretch connecting New London to Groton, Connecticut. As part of the new highway, the bridge's purpose was to remove automobiles from a previous bridge that carried U.S. Route 1 over the Thames River.[3] In 1951, the bridge was designated as the Gold Star Memorial Bridge in honor of members of the Armed Forces from Groton, New London, and Waterford who lost their lives during World War I, World War II, and the Korean War.[4]
In 1958, the Route 1 bypass containing the Gold Star Bridge was connected to the Connecticut Turnpike by extending west to what is today the interchange of Interstates 95 and 395 in East Lyme.[5] East of the bridge, a 13miles bypass of Route 184 was completed to the Rhode Island border on December 12, 1964, officially making the bridge and both bypasses part of Interstate 95. The stretch of I-95 containing the bridge is known as the Jewish War Veterans Memorial Highway.[6]
During construction of the north span (southbound) on July 1, 1972, the US Coast Guard Academy's three-masted barque was involved in a serious accident with the bridge as she was returning to her berth in New London. The ship's foremast and mainmast caught the safety netting slung below the new bridge, despite extensive precautions, as she passed below the original span and the new span being built parallel to it. Both masts were snapped off about seven-eighths of the way up, the upper parts left hanging dangerously from the remaining upright masts. The ship had to undergo emergency repairs as a result.
The bridge's second span was completed in 1973.[7]
In 1975, the south span was partially rebuilt, and it carries northbound traffic.
On April 21, 2023 a truck carrying heating oil collided with a vehicle on the southbound bridge, killing the driver of the oil truck and injuring at least two others.[8] [9] [10] The crash dumped approximately 2,200 gallons of oil onto the bridge which caught fire. Initially, authorities believed that the fire spread to buildings below the bridge,[11] but they later stated that it only spread to adjacent brush.[12] Following the crash, the Connecticut Department of Transportation shut down the southbound bridge to traffic, waiting for engineers to confirm the bridge's structural integrity. It reopened to automobile traffic later that day. The pedestrian/cyclist section of the bridge remained closed, giving those users no way to cross the Thames River. It took 23 days of this closure before shuttle service was provided to pedestrians and cyclists.[13]
The design is a pair of steel cantilever bridges, each composed of eleven spans.[14] [15]
The posted traffic speed limit is 55 miles per hour.
The newer southbound (north) span has a sidewalk/bike path on the north side of the bridge, accessible from Bridge St and Riverview Ave on the Groton side and Williams Street on the New London side.[16] [17]