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Baltimore bridge collapse brings up memories of 35W disaster 02:21. MINNEAPOLIS — For many in Minnesota, Tuesday's major bridge collapse in Baltimore is bringing back traumatic memories of the ...
Five years ago, at 6:05 p.m., the Interstate 35W bridge in Minneapolis collapsed, plunging dozens of cars, trucks and road workers into the Mississippi River. Thirteen people died. An additional 14… ...
THE COLLAPSE. The Interstate 35W bridge was one of the busiest in Minnesota before it fell Aug. 1, 2007. First responders scrambled to rescue survivors from the debris, ...
The I-35W bridge was one of Minnesota's busiest, carrying 140,000 cars a day over the Mississippi River. It collapsed during rush hour on Aug. 1, 2007. Ten years later, the disaster still looms large.
To remember the collapse of a busy Minneapolis freeway bridge, state historians preserved items they thought would vividly convey the chaotic scene that unfolded back in August 2007: a battered ...
Minneapolis — An engineering firm hired to evaluate the Interstate 35W bridge before it collapsed in 2007 has agreed to pay $52.4 million to more than 130 people affected by the tragedy, attorneys ...
Aug. 1, 2007. At 6:05 p.m., the Interstate 35W bridge spanning the Mississippi River in Minneapolis collapses. Aug. 2, 2007. An order for a review of bridge inspection processes is issued from ...
Like so many Minnesotans, I have vivid memories of the I-35W bridge collapse in Minneapolis. Today we remember the 13 lives lost and recommit to investing in the future of our state’s ...
The I-35W bridge failure and collapse resulted in an estimated economic loss of $71,000 to $220,000 per day, depending on how drivers adjusted their trips, ...
Rebuilding Baltimore's collapsed Francis Scott Key Bridge could take anywhere from 18 months to several years, experts say, while the cost could be at least $400 million — or more than twice that.
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I-35W Bridge Collapse - When 1,000 Feet of Concrete Gave Way - MSNThe collapse of the I-35W bridge stunned a nation and exposed deadly cracks in America’s infrastructure. More for You. The Fed’s chief has gone native, but Trump is playing with fire.
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