A bridge to the future
Luis Pena
After five months of repairs, partial closures and a price tag of
$760,000, the city of Newport Beach and the Lido Isle Community Assn.
rededicated the 74-year-old Lido Isle Bridge Thursday.
The quest to begin repairs on the historic bridge began in 2000,
when then-community association board member Gail Rosenstein wrote to
now-Mayor Tod Ridgeway and City Manager Homer Bludau about the
bridge’s poor condition, which included rust. She began working with
city design engineer Lloyd Dalton for the next four years on the
project, and after two years, it ended up on the city’s budget.
“The sidewalks were literally dangerous,” Rosenstein said. “They
were so cracked and broken up.”
A major highlight of the public works project was the
collaborative effort between the city and the community association,
Ridgeway said.
“It was easy to work with [community association members] because
they were very patient,” Dalton said.
One of the bridge’s major changes involved removing the southerly
bridge railing and replacing it with aluminum pipe railing, so the
view along that side of the bridge would no longer be obstructed. The
city didn’t want to spend the $30,000 in expenses for the changes to
the wall, so the community association reimbursed the city for the
modifications.
When the sidewalks along the bridge were removed, 74-year-old
water mains were found underneath, which Rosenstein called one
positive side effect of the project. The replacement of the mains was
then added to the project, saving the city any future expenses.
Other repairs to the bridge included repainting, replacing
navigation lighting, adding 17 flag pole holders and restoring a
bronze plaque, which reads, “Lido Isle 1930,” the year the bridge was
originally built.
Repairs went smoothly, Rosenstein said, and didn’t cause major
inconveniences for residents because one lane of traffic was always
open.
The bridge was at no time unstable for usage because it underwent
two seismic retrofits during the 1980s and 1990s to bring it up to
code, said Marilee Jackson, public information officer for Newport
Beach.
Bob Reno, who has lived on Lido Isle for 42 years, called the
repairs on the bridge “wonderful,” and he was happy the project was
finally completed.
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