The (Raleigh, N.C.) News & Observer
Memphis I-40 Bridge Set to Reopen

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A major Memphis bridge that closed in May because of a steel beam fracture will start reopening the week of Aug. 2.
UPDATE, Aug. 1: Bridge reopens early
The Interstate 40 Hernando de Soto bridge 鈥 a major trucking corridor that runs over the Mississippi River and connects Tennessee and Arkansas 鈥 was closed to interstate and waterway traffic May 11 after a crack in one of its steel beams was discovered during a routine inspection.
It reopened to waterway traffic shortly after but has remained closed to interstate traffic, sparking concerns about shipping delays as the area is one of the heaviest freight corridors in the country.
鈥淚f you compare it to a body, this looks like the arteries and this is the heart of the country,鈥 Adel Abdelnaby, a civil engineering professor at the University of Memphis, told Local Memphis in May. 鈥淪o if you cut the heart of the country, it鈥檚 like you are giving the country a heart attack by shutting down the I-40 bridge 鈥 because that is what connects the east and the west to the rest of the U.S.鈥
The I-40 Hernando de Soto Bridge will partially reopen to limited traffic at 6am Monday, August 2nd, barring any complications. Read the latest here: . 鈥 Arkansas DOT (@myARDOT)
Transportation officials say they will start reopening the bridge to 鈥渓imited traffic鈥 as repairs are finished.
By 6 a.m. Central time Aug. 2, all I-40 eastbound lanes will be open, the Arkansas Department of Transportation says. The westbound lanes will reopen Aug. 6 at a time to be announced.
The Arkansas DOT says the schedule is 鈥渂arring any complications.鈥
The Tennessee Department of Transportation, which shares responsibility for the bridge with the Arkansas DOT, says the final phase of repairs will be completed by July 30 and that workers will start to demobilize, break down platforms and remove their equipment and barriers starting in the eastbound lanes.
But officials say the 鈥渂ridge remains an active work zone鈥 and ask drivers to pay attention to traffic information.
Transportation officials estimated in May that repairs on the bridge could take months.
The first phase of repairs involved installing two 30-foot steel plates on both sides of the fracture to stabilize the bridge and allow crews to work on it. The second phase involved removing and replacing the steel beam using 鈥渉igh-strength steel rods鈥 to restore strength to the beam and then replace the section with the fracture.
鈥淲e know having the bridge closed has been incredibly inconvenient,鈥 Tennessee DOT Commissioner Clay Bright said July 28 in a news release. 鈥淲e appreciate the public鈥檚 patience while our team made the repairs and performed extensive inspections to ensure it鈥檚 structurally sound for many years to come.鈥
Transportation officials originally said the fracture was a result of wear and tear and that a 2020 inspection of the bridge didn鈥檛 reveal 鈥渁ny structural deficiencies.鈥

A crack in a steel beam on the Interstate 40 bridge. (Tennessee Department of Transportation via AP)
But officials later said they found evidence of earlier damage to the bridge.
A photo from a drone video showed the fracture could be seen in 2019 鈥 and that the Arkansas DOT determined the employee who inspected the bridge in 2019 and 2020 鈥渇ailed to carry out his responsibilities correctly.鈥 The employee was terminated, officials said.
鈥淗e didn鈥檛 see it,鈥 Arkansas DOT Director Lorie Tudor said of the worker in a May news conference. 鈥淏ut the reason he didn鈥檛 see it is because he wasn鈥檛 following proper protocol. The way we鈥檙e supposed to inspect a bridge is you literally go inch by inch along that beam and physically inspect every inch of the beam. That did not happen.鈥
Tudor said the fracture grew between 2019 and 2021 because of weather and 鈥渟tress and strain鈥 on the bridge.
The Federal Highway Administration, the U.S. Department of Transportation鈥檚 inspector general and the Arkansas DOT are still investigating the fracture, the Associated Press reports.
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