Part of the bridge's structural beams were hit in the accident. The bridge reopened for all vehicular traffic except semi-trucks including any other “hauling” cars.
HOOD RIVER, Ore. — The Hood River Bridge reopened on Sunday at 1 p.m. after being closed to all traffic through the weekend following a crash involving a semi-truck that caused "severe damage" and impacted some of the bridge's structural beams on Thursday.
The bridge reopened for all vehicular traffic except semi-trucks, any truck over 14 feet and seven inches, and any other “hauling” cars.
The bridge was closed in both directions until Sunday, according to the Washington State Department of Transportation. Drivers that were looking to cross the Columbia River had to detour to either Cascade Locks or The Dalles.
The Port of Hood River, which operates the crossing, said it receive a report and recommendations during a public meeting Sunday morning from HDR Engineering, which has been the engineer of record for structural components of the bridge since 2014. During the meeting, officials discussed the potential of the bridge reopening, including a proposed schedule for repairs. Before the meeting, Kiewit Infrastructure West conducted an independent review of HDR's findings.
Kevin Greenwood, with the Port of Hood River, said they received a report around 10:15 a.m. Thursday that a semi-truck with a flatbed trailer carrying an excavator had crossed the bridge with the excavator's arm not properly lowered. "And so, the elbow basically cut through portions of six different lateral braces above the traveling," he said.
A message on the port's website specified that the damage is on the lift span at the center of the crossing.
Greenwood also said that once the port identified the issue, the bridge was immediately closed. Elected officials across multiple counties including Hood River were notified of the closure around 10:30 a.m. Engineers began inspections Thursday afternoon.
Both the Hood River Bridge and the Bridge of the Gods in Cascade Locks are owned by local government and the respective ports in each bridge's jurisdiction. The states of Oregon and Washington don't own or oversee these bridges.
The century-old bridge is the only river crossing for 20 miles in either direction, but it's extremely narrow by modern standards; Greenwood told KGW last year that the two lanes are so narrow that there have been previous incidents in which passing trucks have locked up mid-span, wedged together between the guardrails on either side.
A $520 million replacement project for the Hood River Bridge is in the works, with construction planned to start in early 2026 and the new bridge set to open in 2029.
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