Water Under the Bridge
The old Woodrow Wilson Bridge is on the verge of a nervous breakdown. You may be, too, when you find out how much the new one will cost.
Cover Story
Alonzo Hines lives on Gale Street in Northeast, but he comes to Jones Point Park at water's edge in Alexandria to fish. He's got his spot staked out among the quiet line of old-timers who work the Potomac, and on nice days he rests on an overturned bucket, catches the sun on his face, and waits. Catfish, rockfish, perch: It depends. It's not that important, anyway. There is plenty of movement to distract the eye and help him idle away the hours: flocks of birds flying in formation, planes taking off from Reagan National Airport, barges slowly slinking down the river.
His favorite activity, apart from reeling in a big old fish, is watching the Woodrow Wilson Memorial Bridge, which looms overhead on a phalanx of concrete pillars in a state of decrepit postwar glory. Like a lot of structures erected during the optimistic construction boom of the late '50s, the bridge was put together with a lot of hope and promise, but under design standards far less stringent than the ones employed today. Congress appropriated $14 million for its construction in 1956. When it was first going up, curious pedestrians and kids on their bicycles would cluster to watch man conquer the river one more time.... Continued
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