Swain's Cut Bridge

Swain’s Cut Bridge carries NC 906 across the Atlantic Intracoastal Waterway (ICW) connecting Oak Island, NC to the mainland. Built for $36 million under contract to the North Carolina Department of Transportation, the bridge opened for traffic in the fall of 2010. A high rise design similar to the Barbee Bridge which crosses the ICW at the east end of the island, the Swain's Cut Bridge is built over a narrow part of the channel and required only three main spans while the Barbee Bridge needed 37.

Swain’s Cut Bridge
Swain’s Cut Bridge
Coordinates33°55′39″N 78°09′33″W
CarriesFour lanes of NC 906
CrossesAtlantic Intracoastal Waterway
LocaleOak Island, North Carolina
Maintained byNCDOT
Characteristics
DesignHigh rise precast concrete
Total length980 feet (299 m)
Width80 feet (24 m)
Longest span278 feet (85 m)
Clearance below65 feet (20 m)
History
Construction cost$36 million
OpenedOctober 13, 2010 (2010-10-13)
Location

History

Looking south towards Oak island
NC 906 & Swain’s Cut

Upon completion of the ICW in the late 1930s, a swingbridge initially provided access from the mainland to Oak Island. Destroyed by a barge strike in 1971, the Barbee Bridge opened in 1975 as its replacement. As Oak Island’s population grew however, the large volume of summer vacation traffic and hurricane evacuation concerns prompted the state to approve building a second bridge on the west end of the island over Swain’s Cut. The bridge is named for the Swain family, which owned the land around the bridge during the dredging of the ICW in the 1930s.[1] At the same time the bridge was being built, a three mile long extension of NC906 was constructed to connect it to NC 211.

Design and Construction

The 980-foot-long (300 m), 80-foot-wide (24 m) deck structure, consists of prestressed concrete girders which carry four traffic lanes across the ICW at 65’ above Mean High Water.[2] The bridge has for the most part been accident free with the notable exception of a construction related incident in December 2008 when a concrete girder placed on a pier dislodged before it was property secured, fell to the ground and killed one worker.[3] The National Bridge Inventory for 2017 listed the bridge condition as good.[4]

View of the Swain’s Cut Bridge looking northeast over the ICW

References

  1. "Bridge Named". LifeinBrunsco.com. Retrieved 2019-01-01.
  2. "National Bridge Data Base". National Bridges.com. Retrieved 2018-12-28.
  3. "Bridge Accident". WRAL.com. Retrieved 2019-01-01.
  4. "National Bridge Inventory". National Bridge Inventory.gov. Retrieved 2018-12-28.
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