The Southern Crossing is a proposed highway structure that would span San Francisco Bay in California, somewhere south of the San Francisco–Oakland Bay Bridge and north of the San Mateo–Hayward Bridge. Several proposals have been made since 1947, varying in design and specific location, but none of them have ever been implemented because of cost, environmental and other concerns.[1][2]
History
5km 3miles
12
11
10
9
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
Proposed second Bay crossing termini:
1947 (combinations of 1 – 4 & 5 – 8 but primarily 3 – 7 and 4 – 8 )[3]: viii
The idea for the Southern Crossing dates back to the 1940s when several additional bridges across San Francisco Bay were studied.[7] After the Bay Bridge crossing opened in 1936, connecting Rincon Hill 2 in San Francisco with the Key Mole 5 in Oakland via two high-level bridges and a tunnel through Yerba Buena Island, vehicle traffic exceeded estimates almost immediately; by 1945, even with gasoline rationing, traffic was 191% of the estimates made during planning, and would reach an average of 69,000 vehicles per day by 1946.[3]: 13 A second crossing was deemed necessary and studies were initiated to determine the best location and configuration.
First proposal (1941): Hunters Point to Bay Farm Island
A study completed on November 18, 1941 conducted by a joint Army-Navy Board[8] concluded that a high-level bridge between Hunters Point 4 and Bay Farm Island 8 was feasible at an estimated cost of $53.2M.[9]: 15 The high-level bridge was preferred to a low-level lift bridge.[4]: I-2 The western terminus would have been on the south side of the existing Hunters Point Naval Shipyard and the eastern terminus would be on the southwest shore of Bay Farm Island. However, no immediate need was identified for a new bridge, and the project was shelved.[9]: 15
Second proposals (1947): Parallel Bridge and Southern Crossing
Southern Crossing: Potrero Point to Alameda
I personally believe that both crossings are needed and should be constructed as early as possible. I believe our plans should be projected on that premise. If it were financially possible to do so I would vote for their construction simultaneously. But it cannot be done. Any new crossing must be financed by revenue bonds and the experts who pass upon such matters advise that we could not sell the bonds of two crossings at one time.
— Governor Earl Warren, Statement at the California Toll Bridge Authority Meeting, March 23, 1949[10]: 38
On January 25, 1947, another joint Army-Navy Board published a study which concluded that a combination of causeway and tube from San Francisco (near Army Street/Potrero Point 3 ) to Alameda 7 was preferred.[11][12][9]: xii From Alameda, the route would run north through the Posey Street tube to a point in Oakland near the present-day western terminus of Interstate 980.[13] This was essentially the same as alternative no. 12 from the contemporaneous California Department of Public Works (DPW) study.[4]: I-4 Both routes recommended by the two 1947 studies were endorsed by Charles H. Purcell, the director of the California DPW on November 10, 1947; however, because of limited budget, the more expensive Southern Crossing option would be built after the Parallel Bridge.[9]: xii–xiii
During the development of the Joint Army-Navy Board study, a public meeting was held on August 13, 1946, where ten alternative alignments for a second crossing were suggested. One group, based in San Francisco, advocated for a low-level causeway allowing the extension of the transcontinental rail line from Oakland; another group, based in the East Bay, proposed a high-level span for automobiles only. The California state government, represented by engineer F. W. Panhorst, agreed with the East Bay group and further advocated that to provide the maximum reduction in traffic on the Bay Bridge, the western terminus should be on Telegraph Hill 1 or Rincon Hill 2 . The August 1946 meeting was also notable for the first public presentation of the Reber Plan, which called for an immense dike between San Francisco and Oakland 2,000 feet (610 m) wide, reclaiming 180,000 acres (73,000 ha) of land from San Francisco Bay and eliminating the need for another bridge.[14] The 1947 Joint Army-Navy Board considered 29 different alignments before concluding the causeway-tube was the preferred option.[4]: I-3
Parallel Bridge
The first of the California state government studies was published a week later, on January 31, 1947, which concluded that another trans-Bay crossing was feasible and recommended that it be located close to the existing Bay Bridge.[3] This alignment was later named the Parallel Bridge.[9]: xii
The main reason to duplicate the existing route was to provide immediate relief to Bay Bridge traffic; the crossing further south from Potrero Point 3 to Alameda 7 was estimated to divert only 20% of existing traffic, and the southernmost proposal studied, from Hunters Point 4 to Bay Farm Island 8 , was estimated to divert only 5% of existing traffic.[3]: 18 The alternative western terminus at Telegraph Hill 1 was rejected on the basis of existing traffic patterns and freeway connections, and the alternative eastern terminus on the S.P. or Oakland Mole 6 was rejected not only because it would require a long high-level span to avoid interference with the existing shipping channel, but also that such a span would also interfere with flight operations at Naval Air Station Alameda.[3]: 18
The 1947 study also determined the feasibility of extending existing railroad termini for the Western Pacific Railroad, Atchison, Topeka, and Santa Fe, and Southern Pacific from Oakland to San Francisco; of the three, SP already had the option of using the Dumbarton Cut-off, and WP and AT&SF used buses (for passengers) or ferries (for freight); both a high-level bridge and a tunnel were ruled out as the required grades for the high-level bridge could not be achieved without excessively long approaches, and the tunnel would require conversion to electric locomotives. However, a low-level bridge accommodating rail traffic was considered for the southernmost Hunters Point 4 to Bay Farm Island 8 crossing as alternative no. 11.[3]: 20
Alternative no. 5 would have used parallel tubes on a continuous radius curve of 32,000 ft (9,800 m), providing the shortest overall distance at 31,850 ft (9,710 m). Each concrete tube would be 38 ft (12 m) in outer diameter, and would be built on land in segments, which would each be floated into position then sunk in place. Ventilation would be provided through the roadway space, connected to ventilation structures at the two termini.[3]: 104–105 A similar underwater route, with termini at the Market Street subway (slightly north of Rincon Hill) and the S.P. Mole was eventually built as the Transbay Tube for BART in the 1960s.
Alternative no. 7 included what would have been the longest suspension bridge in the world for the western portion, slightly longer than the Golden Gate Bridge at 9,600 ft (2,900 m) long overall, composed of a 4,800 ft (1,500 m) main span flanked by two 2,400 ft (730 m) side spans. Of all the alternative options studied in 1947, no. 7 had the shortest distance to span on the western portion.[3]: 106
Four true southern crossings were studied in 1947 (alternatives no. 10, 10A, 11, and 12). 10 and 10A differed in the configuration of the lower deck; 10 called for two truck lanes and two railroad tracks, while 10A omitted the tracks entirely. Both 10/10A and 12 included the cost of an additional tube to augment the existing Posey tube from Alameda to Oakland,[3]: 108–109 which was eventually constructed as the Webster Street tube in 1963. Alternative no. 11 devoted the lower deck entirely to four railroad tracks, as the anticipated vehicular traffic was low. It included a 500 ft (150 m) long vertical lift span.[3]: 110 Alternative no. 12 would use four tunnels on the western half, each containing two lanes of traffic, approximately 6,800 ft (2,100 m) long overall to provide a wide navigation channel; the eastern portion of the crossing would be at the water's level, consisting of a trestle 6,700 ft (2,000 m) long and a mole 13,500 ft (4,100 m) long.[3]: 111
Proposed second trans-Bay crossing study alternatives (1947)[3]: 22–23, 98–99
No.
Western terminus
via
Eastern terminus
Structure
Cost
West
East
2
Telegraph Hill 1
Yerba Buena Island
Key Mole 5
Four-span suspension bridge
Truss/cantilever bridge
$103M
3
S.P. Mole 6
$102M
4
Key Mole 5
$105.4M
5
Rincon Hill 2
—
S.P. Mole 6
Two or more tubes
$167M
6
Telegraph Hill 1
Yerba Buena Island
S.P. Mole 6
Four-span suspension bridge
Truss/cantilever bridge
$101M
7
Key Mole 5
Three or four-span suspension bridge
$134M
8
Rincon Hill 2
Key Mole 5
Twin of existing Bay Bridge, 300 feet (91 m) to the north
$84M
9
S.P. Mole 6
Twin of existing western span
Truss/cantilever bridge
$103M
10
Potrero Pt 3
—
Alameda 7
Truss/cantilever bridge
$108M
10A
$83M
11
Candlestick Pt 4
Bay Farm Island 8
Steel with lift across channel
$130M
12
Potrero Pt 3
Alameda 7
Mole, viaduct, and tube
$137M
The California Department of Public Works created the San Francisco Bay Toll Crossings Division in December 1947 to study the Parallel Bridge and Southern Crossing proposals in further detail.[4]: I-4 In 1948, the Toll Crossings Division reiterated that a southern crossing was "entirely feasible" but recommended the expansion of the existing Bay Bridge with the Parallel Bridge alignment instead, which could be completed in 1954 at an estimated cost of US$155,000,000 (equivalent to $1,965,600,000 in 2023).[15] Preliminary plans for both the Parallel Bridge and Southern Crossing were prepared in 1948, which were reviewed by a board of consulting engineers in 1949.[10]: 2–3
Because both bridges could not be financed simultaneously, the California Toll Bridge Authority resolved to complete the plans for the Parallel Bridge on March 23, 1949.[10]: 3–4 Local and state leaders failed to align their support on a single proposal. In May 1949, San Francisco mayor Elmer Robinson testified before the California State Assembly in support of the Southern Crossing.[16] Director Purcell went before Congress in July 1949 to request permission to expand the right-of-way on Yerba Buena Island to allow construction of the Parallel Bridge.[10]: 3–4 Work on both the Southern Crossing and Parallel Bridge projects was halted on June 30, 1950, after disputes about the priority, alignment, and purpose of a second bridge could not be reconciled. An attempt to revive a second trans-Bay crossing failed to pass the California State Legislature during the 1951 session.[4]: I-5
Third proposal (1949, 1989, 1999): Wright/Polivka Butterfly Wing bridge
At about the same time, architect Frank Lloyd Wright and engineer Jaroslav Joseph Polivka unveiled the reinforced concrete "Butterfly Wing" bridge in May 1949 before Bay Toll Crossings.[17] The Butterfly Wing bridge was first presented to the public in May 1953 before a sold-out audience at the San Francisco Museum of Art.[18] A 16 ft (4.9 m) long model of the Butterfly Wing bridge was built for the 1953 presentation;[18] it was later displayed locally in shops,[19] malls,[20] and was included in a traveling exhibition[21] before being used as a prop in the 1988 film Die Hard.[22]
Polivka had previously submitted preliminary plans to DPW for a Southern Crossing bridge in February 1947; his initial design featured an immense 3,200-foot (980 m) long concrete arch spanning the navigation channel, which was unprecedented in length, size, and material.[23] Polivka is credited with piquing Wright's interest in bridge design; they began their collaboration later in 1947, resulting in the Butterfly Wing bridge proposal for the Southern Crossing.[24][25]: 748 The Butterfly Wing design was derived from a crossing designed by Wright in 1947 over the Wisconsin River near Spring Green, Wisconsin for the Wisconsin Highway commission.[21]
The final design carries six lanes of traffic over twin 2,000-foot (610 m) long diverging arches providing 200 feet (61 m) of vertical clearance above the bay's main ship channel.[26] Another source claims the pair of main arches were 1,000 feet (300 m) long and afforded 175 feet (53 m) of vertical clearance.[25]: 750–752 The concrete "tap-root" piers were hollow to add buoyant support to the structure.[23] The original alignment had a western terminus near Third and Army 3 and an eastern terminus on Bay Farm Island 8 .[27] The design included a hanging park and parking in the middle of the arched section, making the Butterfly Bridge a destination in addition to a crossing.[22] Polivka and Wright's design, using reinforced concrete, was designed to be half the cost of a conventional steel bridge, provide lower maintenance costs, and resist earthquake damage.[28] However, such proposals never got beyond the drawing board because of cost concerns.[13][29]
The Butterfly Wing bridge design has been revived occasionally since it was first announced; in 1989, the Oakland Museum of California exhibited the bridge drawings and model,[24] and that year, Aaron Green and T. Y. Lin proposed the Wright/Polivka design should be built between San Bruno 12 (western terminus at the junction of I-380 and the Bayshore Freeway) and San Lorenzo 11 (terminating into Hwy 238), carrying eight lanes of traffic and BART tracks.[30] In 1999, the Butterfly Wing design was again promoted, this time as a candidate design for the eastern span replacement of the San Francisco–Oakland Bay Bridge,[31] winning Oakland mayor Jerry Brown's support, although by that time, the design had already missed the deadline for replacement proposals, which had been during a three-day workshop held in 1997.[24]
Fourth proposal (1953–58): Potrero Point to Bay Farm Island
In 1953, the legislature passed a bill to build the Southern Crossing[32] with the alignment spanning from San Francisco near Third and Army Streets (Potrero Point 3 )to near Bay Farm Island 8 in Alameda.[7][13] The western approaches would include connections to the Bayshore Freeway at 26th Street; the Southern Crossing would also connect with a proposed future freeway at Army Street and an extended Embarcadero Freeway.[4]: § V At the eastern end, the southern crossing would connect to the Alameda County road along the bayfront near its intersection with Kilkenny Road.[4]: § VI [32] The Southern Crossing alignment specified by the legislature had not been previously studied in the 1941 and 1947 reports.[4]: I-6
After the Southern Crossing Bill was passed, at a public hearing held on August 17, 1953, the Navy announced plans to extend its seadrome runways south from NAS Alameda, which would interfere with the planned direct alignment of the Southern Crossing, and the Department of the Army subsequently denied the Southern Crossing application on November 3, 1953.[4]: I-6 A revised alignment was designed to route around the restricted area, and the Army granted a construction permit on April 8, 1954,[4]: I-7 contingent on the construction to start within five years and complete within ten.[4]: Append-11
In the 1954 Progress Report, the approved design for the Southern Crossing was largely a low-level causeway not to exceed 40 feet (12 m) in height to avoid seadrome interference, although the eastern approach would provide a vertical clearance of 15 feet (4.6 m) to allow the passage of crash boats from NAS Alameda. A tube section would be built across the navigation channel to allow the passage of ships deeper into the Bay. Traffic would be carried in six lanes, divided into two three-lane causeways and three two-lane tubes, and grades would be limited to 31⁄2%. The total planned length of the 1954 Southern Crossing was 40,730 feet (12,410 m).[4]: IV-1, 2
Reinforced concrete spans supported by reinforced concrete piles. Two roadways, each 38 ft (12 m) wide and with three unidirectional lanes.
West Transition
813 ft 248 m
Transition (from viaduct to tube) and ventilation structures to be built on artificial sand islands.
West Ventilation
75 ft 23 m
Bay Tube
5,808 ft 1,770 m
Navigation channel is 1,500 ft (460 m) wide allowing a minimum draft of 50 ft (15 m). Tubes set in dredged trench; trench would be 7,700 ft (2,300 m) long, 60 to 70 ft (18 to 21 m) deep, and 140 to 350 ft (43 to 107 m) wide. Cylindrical tube sections each 200.25 ft (61.04 m) long to be fabricated on land, towed into position, sunk into trench, and covered with sand. Tube sections would be 37 ft (11 m) (outer diameter) and 32 ft (9.8 m) (inner diameter), each weighing 5,253 short tons (4,765 t). Fresh air supplied from ventilation structures to duct under roadway; duct above roadway used for exhaust.
East Ventilation
75 ft 23 m
Transition (from tube to viaduct) and ventilation structures to be built on artificial sand islands.
East Transition
813 ft 248 m
East Viaduct
21,856 ft 6,662 m
Reinforced concrete spans supported by reinforced concrete piles. Two roadways, each 38 ft (12 m) wide and with three unidirectional lanes. Maximum elevation 22 ft (6.7 m) above mean sea level to accommodate crash boat channel.
Mole and Toll Plaza
6,002 ft 1,829 m
Two parallel 36 ft (11 m) wide roadways separated by 6 ft (1.8 m) wide median. Eight toll lanes provided for toll plaza to be built offshore from Bay Farm Island.
According to the 1955 Progress Report, the preliminary plans had been completed and updated cost estimates were available.[33] In March 1956, the 1955 Supplement report was issued covering the legislative amendments made that month changing the San Francisco approaches to the Southern Crossing.[34][35][36]
The Southern Crossing design was updated again in October 1956; the 1956 Progress Report detailed further changes to the San Francisco and Bay Farm Island approaches mandated by legislative action.[37][38][39] By 1956, the Southern Crossing was ready to post requests for bidding; because there was "considerable opposition to raising tolls on the Bay Bridge" from their current US$0.25 (equivalent to $2.8 in 2023), the cost of the Southern Crossing meant the project would have to be built in stages.[39]: I-3 The overall length of the Southern Crossing was reduced slightly to 39,910 feet (12,160 m) with the revised approaches, but retained the same basic structure: two three-lane roadways carried on mole and viaducts, with a three-tube (each with two unidirectional lanes) section crossing the navigation channel.[39]: II-2 In San Francisco, the northern approach would connect with the Embarcadero Freeway; the southern approach would connect with the Southern Freeway, and the direct connection with the Bayshore Freeway was dropped. Both approaches would be double-decked, with three unidirectional lanes per deck.[39]: II-4 On Bay Farm Island, the Southern Crossing would split into two separate approaches at the Bay Farm Island Bridge; the two would then would connect with the Eastshore Freeway and the Posey and Webster Street tubes.[39]: II-5 In addition, the 1956 Progress Report considered the effect of the Southern Crossing on traffic over the San Mateo–Hayward Bridge (acquired by the State of California in September 1951) as well as the planned Transbay Tube.[39]: § VIII
To explore the financial feasibility further, DPW commissioned a study from Smith Barney & Co., which concluded "the Complete Southern Crossing is not feasible as presently authorized at a basic toll rate of 25 cents for both the Bay Bridge and the Southern Crossing"; the California Toll Bridge Authority then directed Bay Toll Crossings to develop a Minimum Southern Crossing plan.[40]: I-1, 2 One key statute passed in the 1957 session imposed a July 1, 1958 deadline; if funding was not finalized for the Southern Crossing by then, the project would be dissolved.[41] Another authorized funds for the construction of the Webster Street Tube without tying it to the larger Southern Crossing project.[42] Under the Minimum Southern Crossing plan of 1957, the same general alignment and design was retained, but the approaches were pruned back to a single interchange near Third and Army in San Francisco and a connection to the Bay Farm Island Bridge in the East Bay.[40]: II-1, 2
In May 1958, the Southern Crossing project was defunded and abandoned;[43] plans made to expand the capacity of existing crossings (plans completed in March 1957 to remove the Key System tracks on the lower deck of the Bay Bridge; additionally, plans completed in October 1958 to double the capacity of the San Mateo Bridge) meant a second crossing was no longer needed. In addition, by this time, plans for the Transbay Tube for public transit service across the Bay had been sufficiently developed to forecast relief for Bay Bridge traffic.[44]: § II
Fifth proposal (1962–72): Southern alignments
Three-way bridge and San Mateo County
Yet another alternative alignment, proposed in the November 1962 Trans-bay Traffic Study, would connect India Basin 9 to both Alameda 7 and Bay Farm Island 8 ; the bridge would run to a mid-Bay junction off the southern shore of Alameda and then fork north and east, respectively. The 1962 study also included a more southern alternative alignment between Sierra Point 10 and Roberts Landing 11 in San Lorenzo, the first Southern Crossing proposal to include a terminus in San Mateo County. Subsequent public hearings, held in 1964 and 1965, showed strong popular support for both of the two proposed routes, with home geography dictating which route was favored,[5]: 4–5 and in 1965, the legislature authorized a study to compare the two alternatives as well as ferry service.[45] The results of that study were published in the 1966 Southern Crossing of San Francisco Bay report.[5]
For the India Basin–Alameda–Bay Farm Island alternative, the main navigation channel off Hunters Point would be spanned by either a high-level bridge (providing at least 220 ft (67 m) of vertical clearance) or a subsurface tube (allowing at least 50 ft (15 m) of draft). On the western end, the approach would connect to a proposed Hunters Point Freeway which would run north-south to the east of the existing Bayshore Freeway. The eastern approach would split into two at the toll plaza, located approximately 1 mile (1.6 km) offshore from Alameda; the northerly leg would continue to a new set of tubes parallel to the existing Posey and Webster Street tubes, while the easterly leg would continue to Davis Street in San Leandro.[5]: 14–29 The estimated cost of this alignment would range between $300.8 million (bridge) to $397.1 million (tunnel), depending on the option chosen to cross the navigation channel.[5]: 36–37
The Sierra Point–Roberts Landing alternative was first proposed in 1959; the total length of approximately 12.5 mi (20.1 km) would be low-level trestle or earthen barrier, with a high-level bridge over the navigation channel, similar to the second San Mateo–Hayward Bridge. The earthen barrier option was a variant of the Reber Plan, calling for a series of locks to preserve a navigation channel south, but otherwise allowing residential development on Bay fill south of the barrier.[5]: 40–55 The total estimated cost of this alignment ranged between $209.7 million (trestle) to $352.6 million (barrier).[5]: 60–61
Of the two alignments, the India Basin–Alameda–Bay Farm Island option was expected to have the greatest relief for Bay Bridge traffic and was recommended in the 1966 study report. Under the contemporary rules, the amount of money diverted from toll revenues to fund BART meant that construction of either alternative would be delayed to 1968; if the diversion was increased from $133 million to $178 million, however, the Southern Crossing would be delayed or potentially unfeasible. The earthen barrier option of the Sierra Point–Roberts Landing alignment was ruled out as the economic benefits would not justify the additional cost.[5]: 104–106
India Basin–Alameda–Bay Farm Island
The Hunters Point/India Basin–Alameda–Bay Farm Island alignment was ultimately selected in April 1966[46]: 21 with a cable-stayed girder bridge over the main channel using an orthotropic deck.[47] The design of the channel span was directed by the noted local architect William Stephen Allen, designed to harmonize with the neighboring Bay and San Mateo bridges.[46]: 13 The Bay Conservation and Development Commission granted permits for construction of the Southern Crossing on November 6, 1969.[46]: 21
Opposition to the Southern Crossing was led by the Sierra Club and notable local politicians, including state senatorGeorge Moscone; AssemblymembersWillie Brown, John Burton, John Foran, and Leo McCarthy; and SupervisorsDianne Feinstein, Terry Francois, Robert E. Gonzalez, Robert H. Mendelsohn, and Ron Pelosi.[48] In San Francisco, Francois and Gonzalez argued the estimated $500 million cost of the Southern Crossing project would be better spent on rapid transit, and Mendelsohn and Pelosi introduced a resolution to require the project to evaluate its impact on BART.[49] Support for the Southern Crossing was largely from legislators representing districts outside the Bay Area; local polls from early 1972 showed that nearly two-thirds of Bay Area residents opposed the Southern Crossing.[50]
The scheduled start of construction was delayed until late 1971, and the anticipated completion date was 1975. Because of its potential to siphon riders (and revenue) away from the nascent BART system, the California State Assembly ordered the Toll Bridge Authority to reconsider the Southern Crossing in 1970.[47] In February 1971, the Toll Bridge Authority concluded in a report published after holding two public meetings in San Francisco and Oakland that "It is in the public interest to begin construction on this needed facility [the Southern Crossing] as soon as possible."[46] At the Oakland meeting, held the preceding December, chief engineer E. R. "Mike" Foley of the Toll Bridge Authority argued the Southern Crossing was needed to support cargo traffic and to relieve congestion on the Bay Bridge, but local politicians opposing the new bridge cited pollution concerns and the possibility of increased traffic jams due to induced demand.[51]
The 1971 report concluded that BART revenues would be minimally affected, as the Southern Crossing would provide access to southern San Francisco and northern San Mateo County, while BART would serve downtown San Francisco instead.[46]: 7 At the time, the Bay Bridge was operating at well over its designed capacity, serving 165,000 vehicles per day, on average. BART was anticipated to divert 10% of existing traffic to provide some relief, but by 1980, it was projected the Bay Bridge would see 190,000 vehicles per day while BART would move 143,000 trans-Bay commuters daily. If the Southern Crossing had been built, it was projected that in 1980, Bay Bridge traffic would be reduced to 148,000 vehicles per day, the Transbay Tube would serve 138,000 daily commuters, and the Southern Crossing would be operating at 105,000 vehicles per day.[46]: 4–5
In March 1971, Assemblymember Robert W. Crown (D-Alameda) sponsored AB 151, which would give the final decision to proceed with the construction to the legislature, taking that choice away from Bay Toll Crossings.[52] Although it passed both houses with overwhelming majorities, AB 151 was vetoed by Governor Ronald Reagan,[53] who stated the citizens of the Bay Area should be allowed to vote for the approval of the Southern Crossing directly.[54] The Assembly was unable to override the veto,[55] and two regional measures were put on the ballot for six Bay Area counties in the June 6, 1972 election: one that would give the final approval for the Southern Crossing to the legislature,[56] which voters approved,[57] and another (Proposition A) which would issue bonds to fund the Southern Crossing, which was defeated.[58][59]
Sixth proposal (1989–91): San Bruno/San Leandro
In 1989, State Senator Quentin L. Kopp introduced Senate Concurrent Resolution No. 20, which funded a study to analyze the need for another crossing option (whether tunnel, bridge, or ferry) between Alameda County and San Francisco or San Mateo County.[60] The resulting Bay Crossings Study was published by the Metropolitan Transportation Commission (MTC) in 1991 and the scope was not limited to an automobile bridge; the eleven alternatives studied were:[61]
High-Speed Ferry and Operational Upgrade
Southern Crossing Bridge
Southern Crossing tunnel
Interstate 380 to I-238 bridge (with BART)
Interstate 380 to I-238 tunnel (with BART)
BART SFO/OAK airport connection
BART Alameda to Candlestick connection
New BART Transbay Tube
Airport people-mover connection
Railroad Airport connection
Intercity rail connection
Of these, the 1991 Bay Crossings Study evaluated five: alternatives 1, 4, 6, 8, and 11.[61] The proposed alignment for a new Mid-Bay Bridge (Alternative 4) ran between San Bruno 12 and San Leandro 11 ; two variants of Alternative 4 were studied in 1991, one with four lanes and another with eight lanes and BART tracks. The narrow four-lane bridge was estimated to cost $2 billion.[62] The eight-lane bridge was estimated to cost the most out of all the alternatives studied ($4 B), but would carry the greatest number of trips, providing the most relief to Bay Bridge traffic.[61]
This Southern Crossing initiative eventually died after facing opposition from environmental groups.[58]
Later proposals (2000+)
U.S. Senator Dianne Feinstein revived the Southern Crossing proposal in 2000, writing a letter to California Governor Gray Davis that a study of an alternative bay crossing "must be undertaken promptly", citing projections of growing traffic congestion.[58] After two years, MTC published the 2002 San Francisco Bay Crossings Study, an update to the prior 1991 study;[6] in it, MTC concluded that a Mid-Bay Bridge between Interstate 238 in Hayward and Interstate 380 in San Bruno would cost up to US$8.2billion to build.[1][6]: 42 Other alternatives that were studied in this period included a second Transbay Tube, widening the San Mateo–Hayward Bridge to eight lanes, and Dumbarton Rail Corridor service; of these, the Mid-Bay Bridge proved to be the most polarizing, the second Tube was the costliest, and Dumbarton Rail was called "one of the least expensive and most cost-effective of the transbay improvements studied."[6]: 2 Several alternatives were screened out during preliminary evaluations as unfeasible, including a road and rail bridge between I-238 and Candlestick Point, a Mid-Bay BART tube, and a SFO—OAK airport rail shuttle.[6]: 24
The idea was then shelved until 2010 when the Bay Area Toll Authority voted to spend up to US$400,000 to update the 2002 study.[63] The resulting San Francisco Bay Crossings Study Update (2012) concluded that due to increased costs no new trans-Bay crossings were feasible. The Mid-Bay Bridge was estimated to cost $12.4 billion, improvements to the San Mateo–Hayward and Dumbarton bridges were estimated at $2.9 billion each, and a second BART tube would cost from $8.2 to $11.2 billion, depending on the alignment.[64]: 2–4
In December 2017, in a letter to the MTC, Feinstein, along with Congressman Mark DeSaulnier, called yet again for a new span across the Bay.[65]
^ abCleary, Richard (March–April 2006). Lessons in Tenuity: Frank Lloyd Wright's Bridges(PDF). Second International Congress on Construction History. University of Cambridge. pp. 741–758. Retrieved July 10, 2019.
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Thomas Christopher CollinsKardinal, Uskup Agung TorontoProvinsi gerejawiOntarioKeuskupanKeuskupan Agung TorontoTakhtaTorontoPenunjukan16 Desember 2006Awal masa jabatan30 Januari 2007PendahuluAloysius AmbrozicJabatan lainKardinal-Imam San PatrizioImamatTahbisan imam5 Mei 1973oleh Paul Francis RedingTahbisan uskup14 Mei 1997oleh Anthony Frederick TonnosPelantikan kardinal18 Februari 2012oleh Benediktus XVIPeringkatKardinal-ImamInformasi pribadiNama lahirThomas Christopher CollinsLahir...
U.S. Palmese 1912Calcio Neroverdi;[1] Pianigiani;[2] La centenaria[3] Segni distintivi Uniformi di gara Casa Trasferta Colori sociali Nero, verde Simboli Palma[4] Inno Forza Palmese Alé[5]Gianni Penna Dati societari Città Palmi Nazione Italia Confederazione UEFA Federazione FIGC Campionato Eccellenza Calabria Fondazione 1912 Presidente Francesco Sergi Allenatore Giuseppe Crucitti Stadio Giuseppe Lopresti(1 500 posti) Palmarès Si invita a ...
Révolte de Kronstadt Informations générales Date 1er mars – 18 mars 1921 Lieu Kronstadt, île de Kotline, République socialiste fédérative soviétique de Russie Issue Victoire bolchevique Belligérants Armée rouge Comité révolutionnaire provisoireMarins et soldats rebelles de la Flotte de la Baltique Commandants Mikhaïl Toukhatchevski Stepan Petritchenko Forces en présence 1er assaut : 11 0002e assaut : 17 961 1er assaut : 10 0732e...
Rhamnusium Rhamnusium salicis Klasifikasi ilmiah Kerajaan: Animalia Filum: Arthropoda Kelas: Insecta Ordo: Coleoptera Famili: Cerambycidae Genus: Rhamnusium Rhamnusium adalah genus kumbang tanduk panjang yang tergolong famili Cerambycidae. Genus ini juga merupakan bagian dari ordo Coleoptera, kelas Insecta, filum Arthropoda, dan kingdom Animalia. Larva kumbang dalam genus ini biasanya mengebor ke dalam kayu dan dapat menyebabkan kerusakan pada batang kayu hidup atau kayu yang telah ditebang....
Seashore wildlife habitats exist from the Tropics to the Arctic and Antarctic. Seashores and beaches provide varied habitats in different parts of the world, and even within the same beach. Phytoplankton is at the bottom of some food chains, while zooplankton and other organisms eat phytoplankton. Kelp is also autotrophic and at the bottom of many food chains. Coastal areas are stressed through rapid changes, for example due to tides. A marine iguana, Amblyrhynchus cristatus, on the beach at ...
Territory of the United States of America American Concession in ShanghaiForeign Enclave1848–1863 Flag Emblem History • Established 1848• Disestablished 21 September 1863 Preceded by Succeeded by Shanghai County Shanghai International Settlement The American Concession or Settlement was a foreign enclave (a concession) within present-day Shanghai which existed from around 1848 until its unification with the city's British area to form the Shanghai International Settlement...
José Garro González Nazionalità Costa Rica Altezza 184 cm Peso 77 kg Calcio Ruolo Difensore Squadra Jicaral Sercoba CarrieraSquadre di club1 2004-2006 Fredrikstad0 (0)2006-2008 Pérez Zeledón? (?)2008-2009 Puntarenas4 (1)2009-2010 Univ. de Costa Rica? (?)2010-2014 Herediano71 (2)2014→ Pérez Zeledón17 (2)2014 Herediano2 (0)2015 Pérez Zeledón35 (5)2016-2020 Santos de Guápiles164 (12)2021 Municipal Grecia17 (0)2022- ...
Dua spesies antara Gavial: Gavialis gagenticus (bawah) dan Buaya India: Crocodylus Palustris (atas) di sungai Karnali, Nepal adalah salah satu contoh jenis simpatri yang terjadi pada hewan.Dua spesies kantong semar: Nepenthes jamban (kiri) dan Nepenthes lingulata (kanan) di hutan bergunung di Sumatra merupakan salah satu contoh simpatri yang terjadi pada tumbuhan. Dalam ilmu biologi, simpatri adalah suatu keadaan ketika dua spesies atau populasi hidup di wilayah geografis yang sama sehingga s...
Cet article est une ébauche concernant un site égyptologique. Vous pouvez partager vos connaissances en l’améliorant (comment ?) selon les recommandations des projets correspondants. Tarkhan Site d'Égypte antique Noms en égyptien ancien Semenouhor (Smnḥr) en grec Akanthon en arabe Kafr Ammar Localisation Région Haute-Égypte Nome 21e : Nome inférieur du Laurier rose (nˁrt pḥt) Coordonnées 29° 30′ 00″ nord, 31° 13′ 00″ est Géol...
Mansion located in Ankara This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.Find sources: Çankaya Mansion – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (May 2020) (Learn how and when to remove this message) Çankaya MansionÇankaya KöşküFacade of the Çankaya MansionGeneral informationStatusResidence of the Vice Preside...
United States federal executive department United States Department of the TreasurySeal of the DepartmentFlag of the DepartmentTreasury BuildingAgency overviewFormedSeptember 2, 1789; 234 years ago (1789-09-02)Preceding agencyBoard of TreasuryTypeExecutive departmentJurisdictionU.S. federal governmentHeadquartersTreasury Building1500 Pennsylvania Avenue, NWWashington, D.C., U.S38°53′51.2″N 77°2′3.4″W / 38.897556°N 77.034278°W / 38.897556; ...
Ghost town in La Paz County, Arizona Ghost town in Arizona, United StatesSwansea, ArizonaGhost townRemnants of Swansea.SwanseaLocation in the state of ArizonaShow map of ArizonaSwanseaSwansea (the United States)Show map of the United StatesCoordinates: 34°10′12″N 113°50′46″W / 34.17000°N 113.84611°W / 34.17000; -113.84611CountryUnited StatesStateArizonaCountyLa PazFounded1908Government • MayorJessup HutchesonElevation[1]1,283 ft (3...
Russian sculptor Fedot ShubinФедот Иванович ШубинSelf-Portrait, c. 1794, oil on canvas, 69 by 54.5 cm, Russian Museum, Saint PetersburgBornFedot Shubnoy(1740-05-17)May 17, 1740Archangelgorod GovernorateDiedMay 12, 1805(1805-05-12) (aged 64)Saint PetersburgEducationMember Academy of Arts (1774)Alma materImperial Academy of Arts (1766)Known forSculptureAwards Fedot Ivanovich Shubin (May 28, 1740 – May 24, 1805) is widely regarded as the greatest sculptor o...
This article is about one of several different Cape Government Railways locomotive types to be designated 1st Class. For the others, see Cape Government Railways 1st Class locomotives. CGR 1st Class 4-4-0South African Class 01 4-4-0Works picture of CGR 1st Class 4-4-0, c. 1879Type and originPower typeSteamDesignerAvonside Engine CompanyBuilderAvonside Engine CompanyNeilson and CompanySerial numberAvonside 1215-1216, 1235-1236Neilson 2547-2552, 2557-2560, 2582Build date1879-1880Total produced1...
Hastings Ismay Ismay en 1945 1.er Secretario general de la OTAN 1952-1957Sucesor Paul-Henri Spaak Secretario de Estado para las Relaciones con la Mancomunidad 28 de octubre de 1951-12 de marzo de 1952Primer ministro Winston ChurchillPredecesor Patrick Gordon WalkerSucesor Robert Gascoyne-Cecil Información personalNombre de nacimiento Hastings Lionel Ismay Nombre en inglés Hastings Ismay, 1. Baron Ismay Apodo Pug Nacimiento 21 de junio de 1887Nainital, Provincias del Noroeste, IndiaFallecimi...
Chimalpopoca Glyphe aztèque de Chimalpopoca représenté dans le Codex Mendoza. Titre Tlatoani de Tenochtitlan 1417 – 1427(10 ans) Prédécesseur Huitzilihuitl Successeur Itzcoatl Biographie Date de décès 1427 Père Huitzilihuitl Fratrie Moctezuma IerTlacaelel modifier Chimalpopoca (du nahualt Chīmalpopōca, qui se traduit par « Bouclier fumant ») est le troisième tlatoani de Tenochtitlan. Il est le fils et successeur de Huitzilihuitl en 1417. C'est sous so...
Voce principale: Società Sportiva Barletta Calcio. Società Sportiva Barletta CalcioStagione 2009-2010Sport calcio Squadra Barletta Allenatore Arcangelo Sciannimanico All. in seconda Nicola Dibitonto Presidente Francesco Sfrecola Seconda Divisione5º posto, eliminata ai Play-Off Coppa Italia Lega ProGirone Eliminatorio Maggiori presenzeCampionato: Legittimo (33)Totale: Legittimo (38) Miglior marcatoreCampionato: Infantino (10)Totale: Infantino (10) StadioStadio Cosimo Puttilli (4.018) ...