St. Anthony Falls Bridge Traffic

A long exposure hides the cars, but reveals their movements and intents. I chose this photo out of the set because of all of the turn signals on the right.

See the blue wavy sculpture on the left? It represents the curve the Mississippi makes as it passes through Minneapolis and over the St. Anthony Falls.

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St. Anthony Bridge LED Detail

See the blue LED lights? That’s why the bridge is blue. Good to know eh? I think to appreciate this bridge, you need to get down under it and look up. The view of the city from the road is so impressive that the designers lowered the railings and minimized all structures on top. Many famous bridges flaunt their structure above the deck: the Golden Gate, the Brooklyn, the Sydney Harbour etc. But the St. Anthony Falls keeps her beauty out of site, deferring your eyes to the city she supports. How Minnesotan is that?

When you stand under this bridge, bathed in the cool blue light, you notice that she makes no sound as the traffic goes overhead, that there are no cables or decorative bits, just massive solidness all around. This bridge makes one clear statement: I will never fail you; never.

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St. Anthony Falls Bridge from Cedar

There’s a freshly paved path down here, under the bridges. You can pick it up at the Stone Arch Bridge. If you go just up just upstream of the Cedar Avenue Bridge and look, you will see this view. I’m looking forward to coming down here in the winter to see what the lights do to snow.

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35W Megalith Detail

I love all the little hip-height lights around the base of the megaliths; they really give scale to the massiveness of them.

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35W St. Anthony Bridge at Night
Can you believe that it’s been a whole year already? The new St. Anthony Bridge opened Sept 18th last year. Now a magical ribbon spans the mighty Mississippi, casting it’s cool blue light in contrast to all that surrounds it.

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Big 35W Bridge: Theme Click here to view thumbnails for all participants

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St. Anthony Falls Bridge before
Alas, all is back to normal here in river city. It’s been tough on this great city to be essentially cut in half for just over a year. What was so shocking for all of us who didn’t lose anyone in the collapse is that everyone either crossed the bridge regularly or knew someone who did — 140,000 vehicles a day passed over the old bridge.

This first photo was taken from the Washington entrance ramp going North, ten minutes before the bridge opened. You can see the blue glow of the LED lights on the bridge.

Opening Parade
A parade of vehicles began a slow procession across the bridge, a row of troopers, a row of construction trucks and then the crowd that had assembled behind them, honking and hooting!

St. Anthony Falls Bridge Opening

Here you can see the row of trucks and traffic coming from the University side.

St. Anthony Falls Bridge Opening
And there they go! It was fun to see all these cheery, happy people honking and waving. A large group of motorcycles came up over Washington and circled back onto the bridge.

crowd
If you showed up at this moment and had no idea what was going on, it would seem pretty odd, all these people beaming with joy to drive over an interstate bridge; a crowd assembled to watch normal traffic flow at 5:10am on a Thursday.

St. Anthony Falls Bridge From University
After crossing the bridge, I turned around on 4th and stopped to look from the west bank. Unfortunately I shot this from out the window of my idling Jeep, so it’s a little blurry. You can see the 30-foot tall sculptures in the median. They represent the shape of the Mississippi river as it passes through Minneapolis.

Fun with Fences
A little non documentary treat.

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