Monday, November 10, 2003
Alfred Zampa Memorial Bridge in Bay Area Opened
The ANNOTICO Report

This a follow on to a previous Report about Alfred Zampa and the Bridge.

Few blue-collar workers have ever had a bridge named after them. But then, few have survived a plunge off the Golden Gate Bridge and gone on to build other important projects in the Bay Area. The Alfred Zampa Memorial Bridge, a steel-and-concrete tribute to an ironworker who seemed almost indestructible

In 1936, Zampa slipped between two beams during construction of the Golden Gate Bridge and fell more than 200 feet. There was a safety net, but it dipped down when Zampa hit it. He slammed onto the rocks and broke four vertebrae Zampa recovered, went back to work and lived long enough to break dirt in 2000 at the site of the Alfred Zampa Memorial Bridge, which now soars over the Carquinez Strait between the San Francisco suburbs of Vallejo and Crockett, where Zampa was born and raised.
Zampa died at 95, weeks after turning that first shovel. In a bow to all the ironworkers involved, they will slice through a chain with a blowtorch, instead of cutting a ribbon.

The Zampa Bridge connects the Bay Area with the state capitol, Sacramento, an extremely important corridor, and is the first Suspension bridge in the US in 50 years, and the first in California in almost 70 years.
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THE STATE
NEW SUSPENSION BRIDGE OPENS IN BAY AREA
The $400-million I-80 span is designed to withstand an 8.0 quake.

The Los Angeles Times
From Associated Press
November 9, 2003

VALLEJO, Calif. — With speeches, parades and a blowtorch to cut an iron ribbon, the nation's first major suspension bridge since 1973 opened Saturday, a 3,400-foot span across the Carquinez Strait north of Berkeley.

During an afternoon event that attracted thousands to this blue-collar town, Gov. Gray Davis helped ironworkers dedicate the structure by slicing through a ceremonial chain with a blast of fire.

"What a magnificent bridge you folks have put together," he said.

State officials held the ceremony a week earlier than originally scheduled to give the honor to Davis, who presided over its construction and leaves office Nov. 17.

The $400-million Alfred Zampa Memorial Bridge is named for a local ironworker who fell from the Golden Gate Bridge during its 1936 construction and survived to build six more bridges in the Bay Area. The new three-lane structure is 410 feet high, rests on two massive piers and is designed to withstand an earthquake of magnitude 8.0.

Zampa died at 95, weeks after turning the first shovel of dirt for the structure, the longest suspension bridge to open in the United States since the newer span of the Chesapeake Bay Bridge near Annapolis, Md. More than two dozen of Zampa's iron-working relatives attended, including his son Dick Sr. and grandson Dick Jr., 47. The grandson sliced the thick iron chain with an oxy-acetylene torch.

Angelina Zampa, 17, lighted the torch. Zampa Jr. called it an honor for the family and "all labor" to name the bridge for an ironworker.

"When was the last time they opened a suspension bridge in California? It was the Golden Gate. My mom was there when they opened that," said Pat Karinen, 49, a "pile driver" who helped prepare the Crockett side of the straits for the bridge approach when it was "all mud"...

The Zampa replaces a seismically risky 1927 bridge, a cantilevered steel structure that carries Interstate 80 traffic north across the strait. The interstate is an east-west route but at Vallejo runs north and south. It is increasingly crowded with commuters driving to and from new suburbs between the Bay Area and Sacramento.

The 1927 span, which will soon be dismantled, opened the same day Charles Lindbergh landed in Paris, finishing the world's first solo airplane flight across the Atlantic Ocean. The twin to the 1927 bridge, built in 1958, will continue to carry southbound traffic.

A 12-foot-wide pedestrian walkway connecting the new bridge to the 444-mile Bay Trail, a project designed to create an unbroken path around the bay, also opened Saturday. The bridge begins carrying traffic today.

The new span, financed by regional bridge tolls incorporates more-pliable concrete along with steel in its towers — a key feature in earthquake country.

The bridge has Japanese-made orthotropic steel decks, which are tapered to reduce wind resistance and made of hollow, steel-reinforced cubes. Engineers say it makes the bridge lighter and stronger, allowing it to twist in inclement weather without sacrificing the delicacy of the design.

"We completed the bridge on time without one fatality. Dad would be proud," Dick Zampa Sr. said.

New Suspension Bridge Opens in Bay Area
http://www.latimes.com/news/local/
la-me-bridge9nov09,1,2316776.story?coll=la-headlines-california