I-35W Mississippi River bridge

The National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) cited a design flaw as the likely cause of the collapse, noting that an excessively thin gusset plate ripped along a line of rivets.

[23] Construction on the bridge began in 1964 and the structure was completed and opened to traffic in 1967[24][25] during an era of large-scale projects to build the Twin Cities freeway system.

In February and December 1996, the bridge was identified as the single most treacherous cold-weather spot in the Twin Cities freeway system, because of the almost frictionless thin layer of black ice that regularly formed when temperatures dropped below freezing.

The report also noted a concern about lack of redundancy in the main truss system, which meant the bridge had a greater risk of collapse in the event of any single structural failure.

Although the report concluded that the bridge should not have any problems with fatigue cracking in the foreseeable future, regular inspection, structural health monitoring, and use of strain gauges had been suggested.

However, the project was canceled in January 2007 in favor of periodic safety inspections, after engineers realized that drilling for the retrofitting would, in fact, weaken the bridge.

[50] The construction taking place in the weeks prior to the collapse included joint work and replacing lighting, concrete and guard rails.

[59][60][61][62] Sequential images of the collapse were taken by an outdoor security camera located at the parking lot entrance of the control facility for the Lower Saint Anthony Falls Lock and Dam.

[69] President Bush pledged support during a visit to the site on August 4 with Minnesota elected officials and announced that United States Secretary of Transportation (USDOT) Mary Peters would lead the rebuilding effort.

[66][70] Local authorities were assisted by the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) evidence team,[71] and by United States Navy divers who began arriving on August 5.

The children were returning from a field trip to a water park as part of the Waite House Neighborhood Center Day Camp based in the Phillips community.

Jeremy Hernandez, a 20-year-old staff member on the bus, assisted many of the children by kicking out the rear emergency exit and escorting or carrying them to safety.

Twenty divers organized by the Hennepin County Sheriff's Office (HCSO) used side-scan sonar to locate vehicles submerged in the murky water.

The United States Army Corps of Engineers (USACE) lowered the river level by two feet (61 cm) downriver at Ford Dam to allow easier access to vehicles in the water.

[62][85][86][87] The Minneapolis Fire Department[83] (MFD) created the National Incident Management System command center in the parking lot of the American Red Cross and an adjacent printing company[8] on the west bank.

Minneapolis Police Captain Mike Martin stated that, "The public safety divers are trained up to a level where they can kind of pick the low-hanging fruit.

He coordinated site location and staffing arrangements with the city's Department of Health and Family support and relevant Hennepin County offices.

Much of the bridge debris was temporarily stored at the nearby Bohemian Flats as part of the ongoing investigation of the collapse; it was removed to a storage facility in Afton, Minnesota, in fall 2010.

[113][114] Immediately following the collapse, Governor Pawlenty and Mn/DOT announced that the Illinois-based engineering firm of Wiss, Janney, Elstner Associates, Inc. had also been selected to provide essential analysis that would parallel the investigation being conducted by the NTSB.

[119] FHWA advised states to inspect the 700 U.S. bridges of similar construction[120] after identifying a possible design flaw related to large steel sheets called gusset plates, which connect girders in the truss structure.

Contributing to that design or construction error was the fact that 2 inches (51 mm) of concrete had been added to the road surface over the years, increasing the static load by 20%.

[138] The Grand Rounds National Scenic Byway bike path was disrupted as well as two roads, West River Parkway and 2nd Street SE.

[140][non-primary source needed] Thirty-five people lost their jobs when Aggregate Industries of Leicestershire, UK, a company that delivered construction materials by barge, cut production in the area.

[150] The Minnesota Twins played their home game as scheduled, against the Kansas City Royals at the Hubert H. Humphrey Metrodome just west of I-35W, on the evening of the accident.

[151] The Twins and Minnesota Vikings honored the victims of the collapse by placing a decal of a simulated I-35W shield sign with the date "8-1-07" on the backstop wall within the Metrodome, which was always visible in the typical behind-the-pitcher viewpoint on televised games.

National TV networks sent CBS anchor Katie Couric, NBC's Brian Williams and Matt Lauer, MSNBC's Contessa Brewer, ABC's Charles Gibson, CNN's Soledad O'Brien and Anderson Cooper, and Fox News Channel's Greta Van Susteren and Shepard Smith to broadcast from the Twin Cities.

Among the presenters were representatives of the Christian, Islamic, Jewish, Hindu, Native American and Hispanic communities, police, fire and emergency responders, the governor, the mayor, a choir and several musicians.

[100][non-primary source needed] Gold Medal Park near the Guthrie Theater was a gathering place for those who wished to leave flowers or remembrances for those who died.

[citation needed] Local record label Electro-Voice released a three-disc benefit CD, Musicians for Minneapolis, which raised money for the victims of the bridge collapse.

Musicians included Deke Dickerson, Los Lobos, Steve Vai, Dick Dale, Les Claypool, Calexico, DJ Spooky, and M. Ward, as well as local bands such as the Vibro Champs.

aerial map of the area with the former bridge in red
Bridge location in red
the bridge painted green and the street below it
South end of I-35W bridge as seen from West River Parkway
aerial photo of the bridge next to the 10th Avenue bridge
I-35W bridge (center left) west of the 10th Avenue Bridge (center right), 2004
bridge painted green seen from the Mississippi bank
Bridge seen from below in 2006
animated GIF of the bridge collapse
Security camera images show the collapse in animation, looking north.
Perhaps a dozen vehicles in view of the wreckage
Vehicles that were on the bridge when it collapsed remain in the wreckage. They were numbered as part of the investigation.
R.T. Rybak in a red poncho looking at the collapsed bridge in the water
Mayor R. T. Rybak surveys the collapsed bridge
Emergency personnel running on the collapsed bridge and two Minneapolis Fire Department boats in the water with dozens of observers on the bank of the Mississippi
Ninety-three people were rescued from the collapsed bridge. Minneapolis Fire Department boats on the Mississippi River took about twenty people. The rescue lasted about three hours. [ 74 ]
Navy recovery operation on the bank of the Mississippi with the twisted wreckage
United States Navy divers in the recovery operation, diving from a United States Army Corps of Engineers barge
emergency landing of a helicopter on the 10th Avenue bridge seen from the bank amid green foliage
Helicopter and airboat on the 10th Avenue Bridge
Mary Peters and escort and Sheriff Richard Stanek looking
Col. Michael Chesney, Transportation Secretary Mary Peters , and Hennepin County Sheriff Richard Stanek
In the center, Donald C. Winter , former Secretary of the Navy , views the I-35W bridge collapse site. To the left is Minnesota Governor Tim Pawlenty .
FBI and Hennepin County recovery operations lowering sonar into the river
FBI evidence team and Hennepin County sheriff's deputies lower sonar.
fracture seen in part of the bridge
This image, from the National Transportation Safety Board 's Office of Research and Engineering, shows a fracture in a gusset plate that played a key role in the collapse of the Interstate 35W bridge. (National Transportation Safety Board photo)
Bowed gusset plates, June 2003
overhead road closed sign over freeway
Closure sign on Interstate 35W
dejected looking young men and crowd in front of a section of the collapsed bridge
A section of the collapsed bridge
dozens of observers in front of downtown
Observers on the Stone Arch Bridge
waist high portrait of a TV cameraman and reporter
The disaster site was used as a backdrop by TV crews. Here, Contessa Brewer reports for MSNBC .
A view of the new bridge from directly underneath it, looking across the river
A view of the pillars of the replacement Saint Anthony Falls bridge