I
think we have all been guilty of cursing the Fremont Bridge. For as
many times as I drive across it in the course of a normal week, I may
only truly notice our outrageous orange and blue bascule bridge the one
single time I get stuck when it raises and lowers.
By The Rules
The Bridge
Tenders (the workers sitting in the south tower of the Fremont Bridge)
start the loud warning claxon as soon as they hear a boats horn
or radio signal to open the bridge. For Fremonsters, that claxon
a blaring, high-pitched bark is uniquely home. Too
many times a day a car and/or pedestrian will try to run
the barricades, and cause a longer delay. I have heard a Bridge Tender
take to the megaphone to shout at curious simpletons who wander onto
one of the leaves of the drawbridge during the process just
to take a look
and force the Tenders to stop their intricate maneuvers
until the curious realize that the bar across the sidewalk is there
for a reason. Raising the bridge isnt difficult just impossibly
complex. The Tender has to turn and press several levers and buttons
to raise each side of the bridge simultaneously. The control panel contains
two of each control, one for each leaf of the bridge. Some Tenders try
to keep one leaf slightly ahead of the other in order to visually track
its progress rather than relying on the gauges.
Time Is
Money
Sitting in
my car, waiting, while my life force slowly slips away as
well as my patience, it feels like our trademark bascule bridge (one
of four built in Seattle between 1910-1930) takes literally forever.
It
doesnt. Four minutes is all that passes between the change of
the signal lights to red, the slow trip up and down and a green signal
once again.
Why Wait?
There are alternatives
and Fremont nearly died from them. Before the Fremont Bridge
opened late in 1917, a wooden structure connected the two sides of the
canal - Fremont proper and Fremont Heights (often referred to as Queen
Anne). That thing resembled a bridge as much as your Grandmothers
pad of scratch paper resembles the latest Dell notebook. At the opening
of the Fremont Bridge, a thriving community beckoned visitors to drugstores,
delis, and an Opera House. All were accessible by the streetcars that
crossed and re-crossed our community. Then, in 1932, the
George Washington Memorial Bridge (also called Aurora) shot
over our heads from Phinney Ridge to our north to the crest of Queen
Anne Hill on our south thereby casting our future as well as
the neighborhood into eternal shadow. In 1939, our last drugstore closed
and the Fremont retail district slipped into a long, deep coma. In the
1960s artists brightened the area by opening studios while
drug dealers and drunks blighted it. The cause? Completion of the Freeway
Bridge to our east, made Interstate Route 5 the way for cars, trucks
and buses to cross Seattle quickly, without traversing our slumbering
community.
Adding Up
The Numbers
In 1930, 34,000
vehicles went across our bridge on a weekday. With the shorter and swifter
route over the Aurora Bridge that number plummeted. In 1934, only 13,000
vehicles crossed our little bridge and, fourteen years later, only 18,000.
The number slowly climbed, and Fremont might have awoken but for the
Freeway Bridge. Instead, the numbers plummeted again. It took until
1998 before the Bridge saw 34,000 vehicles once again zip across her
decks. Fremonts revitalization in the late 20th Century has been
credited to many people and events, but it may have been simple math.
Checking
Out The Technology
The City of
Seattle completely overhauled the entire bridge, both
mechanical and surface, in the late 1990s. For instance, the original
plan for raising the bridge in a power outage consisted of a huge capstan
wheel placed in the middle of Fremont Avenue that took six big, strong
men to turn. Now a generator waits below decks and can raise
or lower the bridge should the lights go out. Also, shock absorbers
now protect the huge counterweights of each bridge leaf to help slow
the bridge should a gear break. As for the rest of it
well, there
isnt much that modern technology can improve.
The Good
News
While the Bridge
overhaul makes it safer for the increasing numbers of cars crossing
its surface, it can feel like it goes up far too much; especially when
stopped while late for work or your hot e-date. Actually, that isn’t
true. The Fremont Bridge is going up and down far less often than it
used to. In 1974 the Bridge opened and closed 1449 times in July while
in 2003 that number was 780. In January of 2003, the Bridge rose only
290, about 9 times a day. Fewer large craft and sailboats on Lake Union
may account for this decline. Whatever the cause, the next time you
are stopped by the bridge – either coming to Fremont or (gasp!) leaving
– don’t take it personally. It is only four minutes – just enough time
to think up your latest list of excuses for why you are tardy this time…
Joanne McGovern, Bob Roseberry and Steve Louie,
of the City of Seattle, and Jim Neidigh of History House were invaluable
in providing research material for this column but bear no responsibility
for the silly way in which the author may have used it.