D.C. officials clarified the status of a pedestrian bridge that collapsed onto D.C. 295 in Northeast D.C., after a truck hit the structure, shutting down a major roadway for thousands of drivers and causing traffic delays. The highway reopened around 1 a.m., after having been shut down for more than 13 hours. Officials had said that the bridge on Kenilworth Avenue in Northeast was last inspected in February and no structural concerns were found. However, in a news conference late Wednesday evening, Deputy Mayor for Public Safety Chris Geldart said after speaking with the bridge engineers, it was given a 5 or “fair” rating on a national scale from 0 to 9 in 2019. In its most recent inspection, it received a 4 or “poor” rating. 
TRAFFIC ALERT: DDOT has reopened all lanes of traffic in both directions on DC295 following the crash and subsequent collapse of Bridge 66 over Kenilworth Avenue.
— DDOT DC (@DDOTDC) June 24, 2021
It’s not known how long it will take to rebuild. Crews will examine the area Thursday and start the rebuilding process.
‘It’s aging infrastructure’
Siraaj Hasan, chair of Advisory Neighborhood Commission 7D02, told WTOP, “This happened literally at the end of my street; I could see it from my house.” The bridge is near the Deanwood and Minnesota Avenue Metro stations, and Hasan said it’s popular. “Many people use the bridge as a walkway to get to and from the Metro,” he said. “It is a very highly utilized bridge.” He said that he and his neighbors “have been voicing our concerns about the bridge … I mean, it’s aging infrastructure — concrete, cracks in the concrete, rusted steel.” D.C. Council Chair Phil Mendelson said maintenance is often a blind spot. “Governments are very good at creating new infrastructure, but not so good at coming up with the money to maintain infrastructure after it’s been created,” Mendelson said. Gail Thurston told WTOP she was getting ready to merge onto Kenilworth Avenue when she saw the collapse, and said the bridge on the southbound side of the road fell to the roadway below. “I couldn’t tell if anybody was trapped or hurt,” she said. “All I know is, everybody around me who had stopped, we were trying to dial 911 and nobody could get through.” Geldart said it was fortunate no one was more seriously hurt. “We were very lucky – all of us were today.” See video of the scene from WTOP’s news partner NBC Washington:
Collapse caused major delays
The shutdown of D.C. 295 caused major delays on the expressway Wednesday. WTOP Traffic Reporter Dave Dildine said that led to “major delays on New York Avenue through Northeast and Northwest D.C., as well as in the 3rd Street Tunnel.” More than 100,000 trips a day run through the road, and Northeast D.C. and parts of the Capital Beltway are carrying the load. WTOP’s Dave Dildine, José Umaña and Kate Ryan contributed to this report.
