Jersey barriers and barrels were put up this week to limit a section of the roadway to two lanes. Plans are to soon prohibit large trucks from the bridge.
NORTH ADAMS, Mass. — The 61-year-old Veterans Memorial Bridge has been declared "structurally deficient" after the most recent inspection by the state Department of Transportation.
The city's Department of Public Services in a Facebook post on Thursday said the state has issued weight limit restrictions and lane closures.
"These restrictions are due to structural deficiencies found during a recent inspection and are necessary to keep the bridge open until a repair plan can be implemented," stated the post. "Alternate truck routes [sic] detour signage will be posted over the next few weeks. Thank you for your patience."
The span is briefly narrowed to two lanes about halfway through its 171-foot span with barrels and jersey barriers.
"This is a precautionary measure, because there is some critical deterioration," said Mayor Jennifer Macksey on Friday. "So these actions are being taken to really make sure that the rest of the integrity is safe and that big heavy vehicles avoid the area when we get to that point."
The ratings posted by MassDOT's Highway Division on Friday list a deck condition of 7, which is considered "good." But the superstructure rated a 3 and the substructure a 5.
According to the Federal Highway Administration, ratings of 4 or less are classified as poor and 5 or 6 as good. The superstructure's rating of 3 lead to its designation as "structurally deficient."
The bridge was inspected on Sept. 25; prior to that, an inspection on December 2022 rated the superstructure as a 5. Macksey said the city was notified right before Thanksgiving that there was an issue and that Commissioner of Public Services Timothy Lescarbeau has been speaking with MassDOT this week.
Officials have been concerned about the bridge for sometime. There is significant spalling of the concrete pillars and rust on the steel trusses lifting the deck above the Hoosic River.
The bridge was part of the Central Artery project that saw much of the city's center demolished to straighten out Route 2. Not long after, the state (then in a budget crunch) handed the bridge over the to city. The last time it was overhauled was in 1992 with the federal government and state picking up the $2.1 million tab.
Macksey said the city has been told the bridge is safe for now but access by heavy vehicles will be prohibited to prevent further deterioration until a solution can be found. Big trucks and semis that are eastbound will be detoured down West Main Street to and westbound trucks over River Street to Massachusetts Avenue.
The limitations of the bridge will add to the frustrations this year of trying to get from one side of the city to the other. First Ashton Avenue and now a section of Massachusetts Avenue have been closed off for months as part of a massive overhaul of the stormwater system there; plus the Billy Evans Bridge by West Liquors is slated for reconstruction to start before the end of the year.
North Adams already has one bridge out of service: Brown Street. The connector over the West Branch of the Hoosic was closed "indefinitely" in March because of its poor structural condition. The $5.7 million reconstruction of the bridge is in design but the city is working with the Army Corps of Engineers on a temporary solution.
"Not many municipalities own bridges and here we are in the city of North Adams, we own the Veterans bridge and the Brown Street bridge," said the mayor. "And they're both failing."
North Adams is getting $750,000 in federal funding to rethink the Central Artery and consider ways to better connect the downtown to Massachusetts Museum of Contemporary Art, which could include removing the bridge.
Macksey said the bridge and traffic patterns are already being evaluated ahead of that feasibility study but the solution won't be ready in 30 days.
"With all the water we got this summer, everything that was just a little bit deteriorated is now critically deteriorated," she said.
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Leaking Clarksburg School Roof Becomes Priority
By Tammy DanielsiBerkshires Staff
CLARKSBURG, Mass. — The school roof has become a priority after the recent snow and rain has caused some significant leaks.
Principal Sandra Cote attended Monday's Select Board meeting after sending a video of a particularly bad leak to Chair Robert Norcross.
"We've had two other classrooms today that had sprung leaks that we hadn't typically had," she said. "We do have one that it seems to be getting worse, and I know we had a horrible rainstorm and the ice has backed up on the roof."
Cote said the custodian had been on the roof breaking up the ice, and it seemed the water may have been coming through an exhaust pipe.
"I guess the concern becomes where did that come in — was it just the roof or something else," she said.
Officials have for years been asking the governor's office to release $500,000 in a capital bond bill for the roof's repair.
Norcross has been in conversation with the governor's Western Mass office and Director of Rural Affairs Anne Gobi about the money for some time now and sent Gobi a video of the leak.
Dunkin' Donuts celebrated its reopening after undergoing a recent remodel by presenting the Friendship Center Food Pantry with a $3,000 donation. click for more
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Calvi received the Rite of Christian Burial 82 years after he was buried in a mass grave in the Philippines' Cabanatuan Prison Camp after the forces of Imperial Japan overran the island nation in 1942. click for more
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First Friday celebrates the third annual LUMINAMA. Dress in your most illuminated outfits and visit businesses and galleries, and look at the decorated storefronts (including iBerkshires!)
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