Information and Findings From MDOT
The
Fort Street Viaduct is eligible for the National Register as an
important example of a major urban grade separation built during a
formative period of highway development. It is also significant for
successfully overcoming the engineering challenges presented by a
project of this scale.
Fort Street bisects an area that was transformed by substantial
industrial development during the early twentieth century as Detroit
established its reputation as the Motor City. An undated newspaper
clipping in the Burton Historical Collection at the Detroit Public
Library commented on the "passing of Fort Street West": "Once a social
center, it is now a great business artery whose splendid mansions have
given way before the march of industrial progress." The Fort Street
Viaduct passes over a broad expanse of rail tracks just west of the
Rouge River, the spine of Detroit's heavy industry. Companies
concentrated factories and warehouses along these efficient
transportation corridors. The Ford Motor Company's world-famous Rouge
River plant, established in 1917 and significantly expanded in the early
to mid-1920s, is just upstream from the Fort Street river crossing.
Because of its strategic location, Fort Street was one of the routes
chosen in the 1920s to serve as a "superhighway," a system of roads
upgraded by the city, county and state to facilitate car and truck
access to and through the Detroit area. Superhighways featured 204-foot
right-of-ways, central medians, and lighting.
As vehicular traffic volume grew during the early twentieth century,
railroad-highway intersections were increasingly the source of travel
delays and accidents. Plans to separate the grades at major crossings
were made public in March 1928, when the Wayne County Road Commission
announced an agreement with the Wabash Railway and the Michigan State
Highway Department for a five-year improvement program. The railway
pledged to contribute half of the $2 million cost, with the state and
county dividing the remainder. The Fort Road project was the first to be
tackled under the agreement. The Michigan Central and Pennsylvania
railroads joined the Wabash Railway in the effort, each agreeing to
provide $200,000. Another party to the project was the city of Detroit,
which had recently annexed the area, formerly the village of Oakwood.
The project's substantial cost and other design considerations resulted
in a protracted planning process, during which at least seven
alternatives were considered. The structure was required to permit
passage of twelve railroad tracks at an oblique angle to Fort Street, as
well as two city streets. To accommodate the two 40-foot paved traffic
surfaces of the Fort Superhighway, the overpass had to have at least an
80-foot roadway. Aesthetics and safety were also of concern. The Wayne
County Road Commission's 1927-1928 annual report explained that the
design would include an "ornamental concrete handrail" supporting
"ornamental concrete lamp posts" so that "the entire project will be
adequately and beautifully lighted." Construction began in summer 1928,
and was completed in 1930. Wayne County's annual report for the fiscal
year ending in August 1930 boasted that the viaduct "is a distinct
improvement to this section of the City."
The Fort Street Viaduct is noteworthy for its design and size. When the
Fort Street Viaduct opened, it was one of only three vehicular
overpasses of the 33 road-railroad grade separations in Wayne County. It
was usually cheaper to build a railroad bridge and have the street
below; highway overpasses were only used when the number of tracks would
require construction of a lengthy subway. Of the three Wayne County
overpasses, one was a 400-foot-long structure with a 36-foot-wide
roadway; another, which carried a 27-foot roadway, extended 1,700 feet.
The Fort Street Viaduct, stretching 2,800 feet and providing an 80-foot
roadway, was by far the most ambitious structure. As such, it
exemplifies the grade separation program that grew in importance in the
1920s as planners sought to promote highway safety and decrease
congestion.
While the urn-shaped balusters of the original railing have been
replaced by solid concrete panels, the other components of the railings
remain intact, including the octagonal lamp posts. Given the scale of
this structure and the nature of its significance, the loss of the
balusters is unfortunate, but is not a major detriment to its integrity.
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