The outlook is not good for Oregon bridges in a major earthquake.
A study released Monday concludes that U.S. Highway 101 on the coast would be impassable, all connections from the coast to the Willamette Valley would be broken, and only small parts of Interstate 5 would be passable.
The assessment is based on a major Cascadia subduction zone earthquake off the Oregon Coast, which geologists estimate has a 10 to 14 percent chance of happening in the next 50 years.
ODOT spokesman Dave Thompson says it would cost $3 billion to bring all those bridges up to modern seismic standards, and the value of the study is to identify which bridges should be upgraded first to keep crucial highways open in event of a big quake.
Topics Catastrophe Natural Disasters
Was this article valuable?
Here are more articles you may enjoy.
US Cyber Insurance Market Sees Flat Premium, More Third-Party Claims Hit Loss Ratio
Viewpoint: Boom in Hyperscale Data Centers Puts Re/Insurers to the Test
Cedents Find Competitive Market Conditions at Midyear Reinsurance Renewals: Brokers
St. Pete Mayor Accepts $275M Bid to Redevelop Tropicana Field Area for Housing 

