Port Orange Causeway

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Port Orange Causeway
File:POCauseway 0911.JPG
Coordinates Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
Carries Four lanes of SR A1A
Crosses Halifax River
Intracoastal Waterway
Locale Port Orange, Florida
Official name William V. Chappel Jr. Memorial Bridge
Maintained by Florida Dept. of Transportation
ID number 790147
Characteristics
Design Stringer/Multi-beam or Girder
Material Prestressed concrete
Total length 228.6 meters (750 ft)
Clearance below 19.8 meters (65 feet)
History
Construction end 1990
Statistics
Daily traffic 29,000
Toll Free
File:PortOrangeCauseway Aerial.jpg
Aerial view of Port Orange Causeway

The Port Orange Causeway, commonly called the Port Orange Bridge or the Dunlawton Bridge, spans the Halifax River and Intracoastal Waterway in Port Orange, Volusia County, Florida. The bridge carries approximately 29,000 vehicles per day across four lanes of State Road A1A and Dunlawton Avenue.[1]

History

First bridge

The first bridge at this location was built by the Port Orange Bridge Company (owned by S. H. Gove) in 1906, made of sable palm pilings and pine bridge timbers. In 1918, Gove offered to sell the bridge to Volusia County. The bridge was severely damage by a hurricane in 1932, and was torn down. Port Orange was without a bridge for many years after the disaster.[2]

Second bridge

A wooden bascule bridge was finally built here as a replacement in 1951. The two-lane drawbridge was paid for with tolls. The bridge connected the two ends of Dunlawton Avenue, from the mainland to the beach peninsula.[3]

Third bridge

When funded in 1987, the 1990 built Port Orange Causeway bridge (bottom photo) over the Halifax River was planned to be similar to the 1983 Granada Bridge (top photo) passing over that same river.

In May 1987, the U.S. federal government agreed to provide $8.16 million of the estimated $12 million cost of building a Port Orange, Florida bridge planned to be similar to the Granada Bridge.[4] After the drawbridge had aged and was expensive to maintain, it was replaced in 1990 by a new four-lane high bridge, which carries State Road A1A over the river. The Florida State Legislature designated the new bridge as the Congressman William V. Chappel Jr. Memorial Bridge.[5]

See also

References

  1. Florida Dept. of Transportation, Florida Bridge Information
  2. History of Volusia County, Florida; by Pleasant Daniel Gold (1927)
  3. Centennial History of Volusia County, Florida (1854-1954); "Bridges"; by Ianthe Bond Hebel (1954)
  4. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  5. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.

Gallery

External links