Volume 172, Page 118 View pdf image (33K) |
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118 MARYLAND MANUAL TOLL FACILITIES DIVISION Louis J. O'Donnell, Administrator Johnson H. Webster, Chief, Maintenance Bureau Superintendents of Bridges: George W. Phillips, Chesapeake Bay Toll Bridge, Sandy Point, Maryland Paul R. Harrison, Susquehanna River Toll Bridge, Perry- ville, Maryland Elwood E. Schafer, Potomac River Toll Bridge, Newburg, Maryland Harbor Tunnel Plaza, Frankfurst at Childs 21203 Telephone: 356-3600 The State Roads Commission, through its Toll Facilities Division, operates and maintains the three major bridges indicated above and the Harbor Tunnel Thruway (Patapsco Tunnel, under Baltimore's harbor) which was opened to traffic on November 30, 1957. Currently, the four projects handle approximately 30,000,000 toll transactions annually and produce revenue of more than $17,000,000 which is util- ized for debt service after deduction of maintenance and operating costs. The administrative offices and the accounting and maintenance bureaus of this Department are centralized in the Administration Building adjacent to the Fairfield Portal of the Tunnel. The Chesapeake Bay Toll Bridge is one of the largest over-water structures in the world. It is composed of 123 spans extending across 4.35 miles of the Chesapeake Bay between Sandy Point on the Western shore to a point near Stevensville on the Eastern shore of Maryland. The combined length of the project, including roadway approaches, is 7.11 miles. The traffic lanes between the suspension towers are 2,922% feet in length and 198% feet above the Bay to a total height of 354 feet. This bridge was opened to traffic on July 30, 1952. It is located on two of the principal motor arteries, U. S. 301 and U. S. 50. The Susquehanna River Toll Bridge spans the Susquehanna River from a point near Perryville in Cecil County to a point near Havre de Grace in Harford County. It is 7,613 feet long and was opened to traffic on August 28, 1940. It is on another main highway, U. S. 40. The Potomac River Toll Bridge, from a point near Newburg in Charles County Maryland, to a point near Dahigren, Virginia, over the Potomac River, is 11,446 feet in length and was opened to traffic on December 15, 1940. It is on U. S. 301. The Harbor Tunnel Thruway, opened to traffic on November 30, 1957, provides a North-South by-pass of the City of Baltimore as well as rapid motor transit from one area of the City to another. In addi- tion to the twin tunnels under the Patapsco River, which are 1.7 miles in length, it has approximately 18 miles of access roads and approaches usable only by Tunnel patrons. These access roads, in addition to con- necting with principal traffic arteries in the City, provide a link between such through routes as U. S. 40 North and U. S. 40 West, the Washington Expressway, and immediate connections to U.S. I North and South, and to U. S. 301 South. |
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Volume 172, Page 118 View pdf image (33K) |
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