Design and construction In late 2012, officials announced a $906 million plan to replace and realign the bridge. The project was to build new interchanges between the bridge and Suitland Parkway, the bridge and Potomac Avenue SW, Suitland Parkway and
Interstate 295, and Suitland Parkway and
Martin Luther King, Jr. Avenue. The four-lane bridge was to be replaced with a $573.8 million six-lane bridge. A
traffic circle with a large field (to be used for public gatherings, and suitable for several new memorials) was to connect the north end of the bridge with Potomac Avenue SW. A second massive traffic oval on the south end of the bridge was to help connect it to Martin Luther King, Jr. Avenue, and help expand the city's "monumental core" into
Anacostia. Reconstruction of the two interchanges was estimated to cost $209.2 million. The remainder of the budgeted funds will help renovate New Jersey Avenue SE and turn South Capitol Street from an industrial corridor into an urban boulevard. The two-year project was to begin in 2013. An initial bridge design was submitted to the
National Capital Planning Commission and the
United States Commission of Fine Arts in summer 2013. The CFA rejected the design in September, called it "uninspired". The agency asked for a design with a more "contemporary approach" and "bolder look". On January 29, 2014, the
District of Columbia Department of Transportation (DDOT) announced the four construction teams that will be asked to solicit final bids on the bridge demolition and construction: • Frederick Douglass Bridge Partners (a joint venture of
Tutor Perini, T.Y. Lin International Group, and
Stantec) • Skanska Facchina (a joint venture of
Skanska AB, Facchina Group, and
Parsons Transportation) • South Capitol Constructors (a joint venture of
Kiewit Corporation, Corman Construction, and
URS Corporation) • South Capitol Bridge Builders (a joint venture of Archer Western Contractors, Granite Construction, and
AECOM) The cost of the bridge (which included demolition of the existing ramps and construction of the bridge and traffic ovals, but not the Suitland Parkway interchange) was now pegged at $608 million. Mayor
Muriel Bowser budgeted $512.7 million over six years, beginning in fiscal 2016, to begin building the bridge. On August 7, 2017, DDOT chose South Capitol Bridge Builders as the contractor team to design and build the new bridge and ovals. The bridge will have six lanes as well as bicycle and pedestrian access. Anacostia Drive was permanently closed under the bridge and access to it from South Capitol Street and Suitland Parkway was curtailed. In 2017, South Capitol Bridge Builders estimated that, if all went well, construction would be finished in December 2021. DDOT unveiled the new design for the bridge on August 10, 2017. The design is for a long and employed more than 1,300 workers at the height of construction. In 2019 cost of just the bridge was estimated at $480 million. On September 6, 2021, a
5K run was held over the new bridge as part of a ceremony that celebrated its imminent completion. As part of that ceremony, it was announced that the bridge would open to outbound vehicles on September 10, with the inbound lanes opening the next day. Both directions opened on schedule, and the old bridge is scheduled for dismantling once all remaining work is complete. Nighttime closures of the new bridge for up to 15 minutes at a time were scheduled every weekday from September 15 to 29 so crews can finish up construction and conduct tests. Demolition of the old bridge started in early 2021, when the ramp from the southbound bridge to South Capitol Street was demolished to make room for the approach to the new bridge. The sidewalk along that side of the bridge was closed on February 6, 2021. On September 10 one lane of Southbound traffic was moved from the old bridge to the replacement and then on the 12th all remaining traffic was removed from the original bridge and it was closed to traffic. Full dismantlement started shortly thereafter. Dismantlement took several months. The deck was removed by November and the piers were removed in December. The Abutments were completely gone by February, thereby ending the dismantlement of the old bridge.
Operation In June 2022, activist Guido Reichstadter climbed to the top of a bridge arch to protest the overturning of
Roe v. Wade; he remained atop the bridge for 28 hours. In May 2026, he repeated the protest action, this time against the
2026 Iran war,
AI, and the Trump administration. == Gallery ==