The bridges in Northwest Philly will be renovated to replace the scrap rock and rubble inside with concrete and shore up abutments, said Mike Carroll, deputy managing director of the city’s Office of Transportation and Infrastructure Systems. They’ll end up looking about the same, but will be more resilient to traffic and flooding.
“The force of water that’s rushing past the bridge is going to start to scour the abutments. … It’s going to take some of the mortar that’s keeping the rocks together away,” Carroll said. “Any given storm isn’t necessarily going to create a collapse or a catastrophic event. But storm after storm, you run that risk, and that risk increases as the intensity of storms, the intensity of floods, the frequency also goes up. We need to get ahead of that, because we know … that’s unfortunately our future.”
Construction will last around two years, following a two-year design period, Carroll said.
The Bells Mill Road Bridge is considered a critical route for a nearby hospital, said Federal Highway Administrator Shailen Bhatt.
“Imagine we had a hurricane or — actually you don’t even need a hurricane anymore — a bad Nor’easter that just parks itself over this area, [with] a lot of precipitation. Now you’ve got a major commuter route into a hospital that is being affected,” he said. “So rather than wait until a really bad rain storm or hurricane washes out these bridges and now we have to come back and build them in an emergency setting, we’re saying let’s reconstruct them.”
Other grants throughout the country address climate impacts other than flooding. Davis, California, is receiving money to install cool pavement to combat extreme heat, and the Ewiiaapaayp Band of Kumeyaay Indians in California is receiving funds to create a secondary evacuation route for wildfires.