Washington Congressional District 1


  • Of the 1,752 bridges in the counties of this district, 70, or 4.0 percent, are classified as structurally deficient. This means one of the key elements is in poor or worse condition.
  • This is up from 56 bridges classified as structurally deficient in 2021.
  • Repairs are needed on 1,668 bridges in the district, which will cost an estimated $12.6 billion.
  • This compares to 1,584 bridges that needed work in 2021.
  • There currently are now projects in the District that use IIJA formula bridge funds.

Top Most Traveled Structurally Deficient Bridges in Washington

County Year Built Daily Crossings Type of Bridge Location
King 1966 96,847 Urban Interstate I-5 over Lucile St
King 1970 74,410 Urban Interstate I-90 over Mercer Sl
King 1940 74,410 Urban Interstate I-90 over Mercer Slough
King 1940 68,544 Urban Interstate Lacey V. Murrow Memorial Bridge
King 1989 68,544 Urban Interstate Homer M. Hadley Memorial Bridge
King 1952 40,000 Urban other principal arterial S Boeing Access Rd over Airport Way Bar Ramp
King 1930 36,000 Urban other principal arterial Eastlake Ave NE over Portage Bay Pl E
King 1915 35,000 Urban other principal arterial Eastlake Ave NE over Portage Bay
King 1976 33,803 Rural Interstate I-90 over Game Crossing
King 1972 31,879 Urban other principal arterial 15th St Northwest over Uprr
King 1975 31,252 Rural Interstate I-90 over Raging River
King 1933 28,000 Urban other principal arterial 4th Ave S over Argo RR Yard
King 1910 27,000 Urban other principal arterial 4th Ave S over Parking Garage
King 1958 25,000 Urban minor arterial W Meeker Street over Green River
Snohomish 1999 19,198 Urban collector Alderwood Mall Blv over SR 524/196th St Sw
King 1972 18,894 Rural Interstate I-90 EB over Humpback Creek
King 1974 18,876 Rural Interstate I-90 over S Fk Snoqualmie R
King 1972 18,753 Rural Interstate I-90 over Bandera Rd
King 1972 18,753 Rural Interstate I-90 over Bandera Rd
King 1929 18,000 Urban minor arterial W Garfield St over Marina Pl, RR, Ravine
King 1969 17,601 Rural Interstate I-90 over SR 906 W-W Ramp
King 1971 17,601 Rural Interstate I-90 WB over So Fk Snoqulmie R
Snohomish 1927 16,592 Urban freeway/expressway SR 529 over Steamboat Slough
Snohomish 1927 16,439 Urban freeway/expressway SR 529 over Union Sl
Snohomish 1954 16,439 Urban freeway/expressway SR 529 over Union Sl

Bridge Inventory: Washington

Type of Bridge Number of Bridges Area of All Bridges
(sq. meters)
Daily Crossings on All Bridges Number of Structurally Deficient Bridges Area of Structurally Deficient Bridges
(sq. meters)
Daily Crossings on Structurally Deficient Bridges
Rural Interstate 59 84,614 1,540,360 9 11,260 175,889
Rural arterial 66 82,273 658,454 4 2,154 25,071
Rural minor arterial 55 25,174 457,226 4 1,088 38,203
Rural major collector 78 34,039 180,467 1 222 1,618
Rural minor collector 29 14,022 40,852 1 622 1,200
Rural local road 205 53,559 67,574 13 3,122 4,612
Urban Interstate 356 1,120,372 17,171,956 5 129,726 382,755
Urban freeway/expressway 214 723,727 6,127,885 5 19,922 82,042
Urban other principal arterial 211 358,742 4,970,049 10 25,335 237,738
Urban minor arterial 244 291,074 2,966,822 7 16,541 79,016
Urban collector 123 103,577 773,898 9 9,749 68,407
Urban local road 112 65,246 201,909 2 1,359 400
Total 1,752 2,956,418 35,157,452 70 221,101 1,096,951

Proposed Bridge Work

Type of Work Number of Bridges Cost to Repair
(in millions)
Daily Crossings Area of Bridges
(sq. meters)
Bridge replacement 474 $2,308 3,143,362 442,008
Widening & rehabilitation 39 $240 491,296 63,302
Rehabilitation 1,059 $9,793 30,727,128 2,349,559
Deck rehabilitation/replacement 49 $139 316,126 41,383
Other structural work 47 $131 297,800 39,123
Total 1,668 $12,611 34,975,712 2,935,375

About the data:

Data includes information for the following area(s): King, Snohomish

Data and cost estimates are from the Federal Highway Administration (FHWA) National Bridge Inventory (NBI), downloaded on June 24, 2025. Note that specific conditions on bridges may have changed as a result of recent work or updated inspections.

Effective January 1, 2018, FHWA changed the definition of structurally deficient as part of the final rule on highway and bridge performance measures, published May 20, 2017 pursuant to the 2012 federal aid highway bill Moving Ahead for Progress in the 21st Century Act (MAP-21). Two measures that were previously used to classify bridges as structurally deficient are no longer used. This includes bridges where the overall structural evaluation was rated in poor or worse condition, or where the adequacy of waterway openings was insufficient.

The new definition limits the classification to bridges where one of the key structural elements—the deck, superstructure, substructure or culverts, are rated in poor or worse condition. During inspection, the conditions of a variety of bridge elements are rated on a scale of 0 (failed condition) to 9 (excellent condition). A rating of 4 is considered “poor” condition.

Cost estimates have been derived by ARTBA, based on 2023 average bridge replacement costs for structures on and off the National Highway System, published by FHWA. Bridge rehabilitation costs are estimated to be 68 percent of replacement costs. A bridge is considered to need repair if the structure has identified repairs as part of the NBI, a repair cost estimate is supplied by the bridge owner or the bridge is classified as structurally deficient. Please note that for a few states, the number of bridges needing to be repaired can vary significantly from year to year, and reflects the data entered by the state.

Bridges are classified by FHWA into types based on the functional classification of the roadway on the bridge. Interstates comprise routes officially designated by the Secretary of Transportation. Other principal arterials serve major centers of urban areas or provide mobility through rural areas. Freeways and expressways have directional lanes generally separated by a physical barrier, and access/egress points generally limited to on- and off-ramps. Minor arterials serve smaller areas and are used for trips of moderate length. Collectors funnel traffic from local roads to the arterial network; major collectors have higher speed limits and traffic volumes and are longer in length and spaced at greater intervals, while minor collectors are shorter and provide service to smaller communities. Local roads do not carry through traffic and are intended for short distance travel.

28
Compared to 29 in 2024

in the nation in % of structurally deficient bridges

1. Iowa 19.0%
27. Hawaii 6.0%
28. Washington 6.0%
29. Idaho 5.0%

28
Compared to 29 in 2024

in the nation in # of structurally deficient bridges

1. Iowa 4,424
27. Virginia 485
28. Washington 473
29. North Dakota 470

9
Compared to 13 in 2024

in the nation in % of structurally deficient bridge deck area

1. West Virginia 13.0%
8. South Dakota 8.0%
9. Washington 8.0%
10. Wyoming 8.0%
Full State Ranking

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  • Source: Data is from the Federal Highway Administration (FHWA) National Bridge Inventory (NBI), downloaded on June 24, 2025. Note that specific conditions on bridges may have changed as a result of recent work or updated inspections.

    ARTBA is a non-partisan federation whose primary goal is to aggressively grow and protect transportation infrastructure investment to meet the public and business demand for safe and efficient travel.

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