Times-Herald

Interstate 40 bridge reopens after being closed for repairs

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MEMPHIS (AP) — Authoritie­s on Saturday night reopened the Interstate 40 bridge linking Arkansas and Tennessee that had been closed ever since a crack was discovered in the span in May.

The Hernando DeSoto Bridge, a key artery for U.S. commerce, reopened to the public for eastbound traffic, according to video shared by the Tennessee Department of Transporta­tion.

The eastbound lanes had previously been scheduled to open on Monday, but officials recently moved up those plans. The transporta­tion department has said it plans to reopen the bridge's westbound lanes Aug. 6, though it said that could also get moved up.

The I-40 bridge over the Mississipp­i River was shut down May 11 after inspectors found a crack in one of two 900-foot horizontal steel beams critical for the bridge's structural integrity, forcing thousands of trucks and cars to detour to the nearby Interstate 55 bridge during the I-40 bridge's repairs.

Beverly Robertson, CEO and President of the Greater Memphis Chamber, celebrated the news of the re-opening.

"The trucking industry has lost a lot with us being the third busiest trucking corridor in the country. So many goods and services come here and then go out from there," Robertson told WREG-TV.

An estimated $9.5 million has been spent so far on the bridge's repairs, design and inspection after the closure, an Arkansas transporta­tion official said this week. The cost will be split between the two states.

I-40 runs from North Carolina to California. Manufactur­ers and shippers rely on the interstate to move products and materials across the river. About 50,000 vehicles typically travel across the bridge when it's open, with about a quarter of those being commercial trucks, Tennessee transporta­tion officials say.

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