News

A new fixed-span bridge over the Alligator River would aid everything from economic development to hurricane evacuation.” – Office of North Carolina Gov. Roy Cooper , January 3, 2023 ...
The days of eastern North Carolina’s Alligator River bridge getting stuck open after boats pass through will soon come to an end.In the next two years, the 60-year-old swing bridge that serves ...
A new replacement of the Alligator River Bridge is expected to begin construction in late 2024 or early 2025, according to the N.C Department of Transportation (NCDOT).
The North Carolina Department of Transportation has announced that Skanska, USA has been contracted $450 million to complete the replacement project for the Alligator River Bridge.
Skanska USA was awarded a $450 million contract to replace the Lindsay C. Warren Bridge — also known as the Alligator River Bridge — that goes over the Alligator River on U.S. 64 in Tyrrell ...
A major artery connecting Eastern N.C. to the Outer Banks is set to be replaced.
The new bridge will replace the Alligator River Bridge on US 64. The DOT says this is a major step in its $450 million project to replace the old swing-span bridge with a modern two-lane fixed ...
Traffic on the Alligator River Bridge. The aging swing bridge will be replaced by 2029. [email protected] Contractors will soon begin building a new bridge over the Alligator River ...
Traffic on the Alligator River Bridge. The aging swing bridge will be replaced by 2029. [email protected] Contractors will soon begin building a new bridge over the Alligator River ...
The Lindsay B. Warren Bridge, locally called the Alligator River bridge, was completed in 1962 as a two-lane swing-span bridge connecting northeastern North Carolina to Interstate 95 and U.S. 17.
A new replacement of the Alligator River Bridge is expected to begin construction in late 2024 or early 2025, according to the N.C Department of Transportation (NCDOT).
A new replacement of the Alligator River Bridge is expected to begin construction in late 2024 or early 2025, according to the N.C Department of Transportation (NCDOT).