The
Oakland Estuary (then known as
San Antonio Creek) was first crossed by the Webster Street
swing bridge for narrow gauge rail and road traffic, completed in 1871. A second crossing was added in 1873 as the Alice Street swing bridge, built for
Central Pacific (later
Southern Pacific) rail traffic. Both the Webster and Alice bridges were replaced by new swing bridges completed in 1900 and 1898, respectively. The Alice bridge was replaced by the Harrison Street bridge, one block west. The replacements were prompted by the
Secretary of War, who stated the swing spans each needed to be at least to accommodate marine traffic in 1896. At first, it was planned to replace both bridges with a single bridge, but Southern Pacific officials were unable to come to an agreement with Alameda County supervisors, and in 1897 the railroad declared the Harrison Street bridge, replacing the Alice bridge, would be devoted solely to rail traffic, accommodating both narrow and standard-gauge trains. During the construction of the replacement Webster bridge, county supervisors initially rejected an offer to use the old Alice bridge as a detour for road traffic, but later accepted, avoiding a more distant route through the eastern part of Alameda, and teamster traffic moved to Alice in December. The old Webster bridge was demolished by January 1899. By 1916, the War Department had declared the replacement Webster and Harrison bridges were a menace to deep-water navigation and an obstacle to continued development of Oakland Harbor in 1916. The Harrison Street bridge closed to traffic after December 26, 1923 and was largely demolished the following day. After the completion of the Posey Tube, the Webster Street bridge was sold to Sacramento County for in November 1928. The central swing span was subsequently floated by barge up the
Delta and reassembled as part of the new American River Bridge, later known as the
Jibboom Street Bridge.
Posey Tube Preliminary plans for a tube had been explored as early as 1903, but detailed studies were not prepared until 1922. However, the entry of the United States into World War I delayed the plans for a new connection between Oakland and Alameda. and Alameda County voters approved a $5 million bond measure in May to build the tube. After the passage of the bond issue, test borings were taken in the Estuary, and bids were received for the work on March 23, 1925; the construction contract was awarded to the California Bridge and Tunnel Company (CB&TC) with a low bid of , and excavation started from the Oakland end on June 15, 1925. The contract was let by Alameda County without state involvement. who was the
Alameda County Surveyor during the tunnel's planning and construction, and also chief engineer on the construction project. However, the two-lane tube was considered inadequate shortly after its completion. In 1952, the Posey Tube was handling 30,000 to 36,000 cars per day; that same year,
Coronado, California, and its mayor Lloyd Harmon contemplated the laying of a similar tunnel to connect Coronado with
San Diego, when Alameda mayor
Frank Osborne wrote a letter to Harmon, which stated from the time it was completed the tube was never adequate for the purpose for which it was built ... I am firmly of the belief that the building of any underwater tube of less than four lanes—two in each direction—would be a serious mistake on the part of any engineers who contemplate it.
Design The ventilation buildings that house the exhaust and fresh air fans are built in an art deco style; local architect
Henry H. Meyers is credited with the design of both portals. The design of the ventilation system to handle toxic vehicular exhaust fumes was modeled on that of the
Holland Tunnel's ventilation system, and
Ole Singstad (who had designed the pioneering ventilation system of the Holland Tunnel) consulted. A pair of
canaries were used during construction as
living air monitors; although one canary died during construction, it was an accident caused by being penned up with a pet
cat and not a toxic atmosphere. Up to that time, tunnels had been vented longitudinally, with fresh air blown in one end and out the other; the Holland (and Posey) Tube instead used fans to supply air into the tunnel through a space beneath the roadway, and exhausted air through a similar space above the traffic portion. Ducts were set in the curb and ceiling approximately every along the length of the Posey Tube, providing a system of "transverse" ventilation, bottom-to-top rather than end-to-end, ensuring that any fires would not spread through the length of the tunnel. Each segment was cast at
Hunters Point by CB&TC. After they were completed, the segments were sealed and the space beneath the roadway was filled with water as ballast while floating each segment into position; when ready, wet sand was added to the roadway to sink the segment into a dredged underwater trench. Once the joint to the prior segment had been sealed, the water ballast was pumped out and the process was repeated for the next segment. the tunnel portion itself is long. Each segment is long and in diameter, and weighs approximately . From Oakland, the approach extends from Sixth Street to Third Street along Harrison Street. and plans for a second tube at Webster Street had been advanced in 1948 as part of a
Parallel Bridge scheme. The Parallel Bridge was one of the "Southern Crossing" designs which would have added another trans-Bay bridge south of the 1936
San Francisco–Oakland Bay Bridge. Construction began on October 12, 1959. To prepare the Alameda site, a large Navy hangar was moved; at the time, it set a record for the largest building ever moved. The Webster Street Tube was completed and opened to one-way (into Alameda) traffic in 1963. Upon completion of the Webster Street Tube, the Posey Tube was closed temporarily and renovations were performed to convert it to one-way (into Oakland) traffic; during renovations, the Webster Street Tube handled bidirectional traffic. The roadway within the Webster Street Tube is wide, and the minimum vertical clearance is . of which are underwater. A novel fluorescent continuous-line lighting system was designed for the Webster Street Tube. Fresh air is supplied through the lower
lunette space beneath the roadway, and exhaust is drawn through the upper lunette space above the tube's false ceiling. Each portal building contains four blowers and four exhaust fans, and they are capable of providing nearly of airflow in total. The Webster Street Tube project cost more than $20 million in total, including renovations to the older Posey Tube; the construction contract for Webster was alone. ==In media==