Spokane Street Viaduct Explained

Spokane Street Viaduct
Established:1945
Direction A:West
Terminus A:Fauntleroy Way Southwest and 35th Avenue Southwest in Seattle
Junction:
  • in Seattle
  • in Seattle
Direction B:East
Terminus B:Columbian Way and 15th Avenue South in Seattle

The Spokane Street Viaduct is a freeway connecting the West Seattle Bridge to Interstate 5. It runs above South Spokane Street in the SoDo neighborhood of Seattle and is generally four to six lanes wide.

The viaduct was one of Seattle's first freeways, opened in 1945. Over the course of the next few decades, other traffic-separated roadways were built to create a continuous roadway between West Seattle and Beacon Hill, such as the "Fauntleroy-Southwest Spokane Street Viaduct" (which opened in 1965).[1] Upon completion of the high-rise West Seattle Bridge in 1984, the road comprising the Spokane Street Viaduct, the West Seattle Bridge and the Fauntleroy-Southwest Spokane Street Viaduct was referred to as the "West Seattle Freeway". However, a series of fatalities led to recognition that the aging Spokane Street Viaduct portion was unsafe to be used as a high-speed roadway.[2] In 1997, the Seattle City Council unanimously adopted a resolution to lower the speed limit and to request that the WSDOT remove the word "Freeway" from signs marking the entrances to the Spokane Street Viaduct and the West Seattle Bridge.[3] [4]

From 2008 to 2013, the Spokane Street Viaduct section between Interstate 5 and State Route 99 was rebuilt and widened. The widened roadway has three lanes in each direction and shoulders. A new westbound on and off ramp was built at 1st Avenue South and replaced the dangerous 4th Avenue South off-ramp. A new eastbound off-ramp to 4th Avenue South opened August 16, 2010.

The loop ramp from the West Seattle Bridge to northbound State Route 99 was closed on May 2, 2023, due to the formation of a NaNfeet hole that left steel rebar exposed.[5] It reopened a week later after the damaged concrete was removed and replaced by WSDOT crews.[6]

Exit list

DestinationsNotes
Fauntleroy Way Southwest, 35th Avenue SouthwestEnds at an at-grade intersection
Admiral WayWestbound exit and eastbound entrance
Harbor Avenue, Avalon WayWestbound exit and eastbound entrance
Delridge Way Southwest, Southwest Spokane Street - South Seattle CollegeWestbound exit and eastbound entrance
11th Avenue Southwest - Harbor Island, Terminal 18Westbound exit and eastbound entrance
Eastbound exit and westbound entrance
1st Avenue SouthEastbound exit; westbound exit and entrance
4th Avenue SouthEastbound exit
Spokane Street, 6th Avenue SouthWestbound exit and eastbound entrance
- Portland, Vancouver, BC
Columbian Way, 15th Avenue SouthEastbound exit and westbound entrance

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Seattle Municipal Archives Digital Collections : Textual Record : The West Seattle freeway / A design study brief [Doc_9686] ]. 2022-06-22 . archives.seattle.gov.
  2. Web site: June 10, 1993 . Spokane St. Viaduct: Aging Relic Among Modern Highways -- 10 Die In Crashes Since '87 . March 24, 2020 . Seattle Times.
  3. News: Brown . Charles E. . April 7, 2008 . Bumper to Bumper: Dalai Lama, Bus a miss, Name that bridge . B1 . The Seattle Times . dead . May 27, 2018 . https://web.archive.org/web/20180528220051/http://old.seattletimes.com/html/localnews/2004331972_bumper07m.html . May 28, 2018.
  4. Web site: Seattle City Council . March 3, 1997 . City of Seattle Resolution 29541 . May 27, 2018 . City of Seattle Legislative Information Service . Office of the City Clerk.
  5. News: Lindblom . Mike . Kroman . David . Phair . Vonnai . May 3, 2023 . Large hole closes northbound Highway 99 ramp from West Seattle Bridge . The Seattle Times . May 11, 2023.
  6. News: Kroman . David . May 8, 2023 . Highway 99 ramp from West Seattle Bridge reopens . The Seattle Times . May 11, 2023.