By John Sharp
The Interstate 10 Mobile River Bridge and Bayway project’s costs have increased to $2.7 billion under a project that state officials are targeting for a completion by 2028, according to a project update released Friday.
The project’s overall price tag has increased by $600 million from three years ago. A 2019 estimate put the project at $2.1 billion. The increase is attributed to a “inflation-driven cost increases on highway projects across the state,” according to ALDOT.
“The new concept developed for the Mobile River Bridge and Bayway is based on local input and close coordination with leaders from Baldwin and Mobile counties,” said Ed Austin, ALDOT’s chief engineer. “ALDOT is excited about this concept and the benefits it will have for Baldwin County, Mobile County and the entire state.”
$40 monthly pass
Under ALDOT’s proposal, a toll plan remains in place that would assess one-way trips at $2.50 per vehicle over newly built infrastructure only. Existing infrastructure, such as the tunnels, remains untolled.
The $40 monthly unlimited rate would be offered through an “ALGO Pass” sticker that will be made available through ALDOT. The stickers will be affixed to a car’s windshield, and will serve as toll transponders and will be modeled after regional examples like Georgia’s Peach Pass or Florida’s Sun Pass, according to ALDOT.
Revenue from the tolls will be utilized to pay a lion share of project that’s main financing mechanism is through bonding and the hopes of landing future federal grants.
Tolling, according to ALDOT, will end once the project debt is paid off.
The MPOs, in separate meetings later this summer, will vote on the updated plan that includes the tolls. Scheduling, public comments, and hearing details will be provided on the MPO websites.
The project’s construction is expected to begin late next year.
Project praise
In a Friday news release, the chairs of the two MPOs – Fairhope City Councilman Jack Burrell, representing the Eastern Shore MPO; and Mobile Mayor Sandy Stimpson, representing Mobile’s MPO – praised ALDOT’s report and acknowledged that it worked within the scope of a framework both parties unveiled in December.
That framework called on ALDOT to keep the tolls over the new bridge and 7.5-mile I-10 Bayway at no more than $2.50 for a one-way trip. Additionally, the framework called on ALDOT to discontinue consideration of a public-private partnership on the project, which it has done.
A previous iteration of the I-10 project, which was killed in 2019 following local opposition, established a one-way toll of $6. It was also planned to become the state’s first major public-private partnership project for an interstate project.
The 2019 plan also had a much higher monthly pass of $90 for unlimited use.
“Moving forward with this plan is a milestone in the history of Mobile and South Alabama,” Stimpson said. “This bridge is a key component to Mobile’s future growth – it connects workers to jobs and businesses to new customers. Building this bridge will be a cornerstone of Mobile’s future success.”
Burrell said ALDOT’s report represented a “great day for Baldwin County,” and added that he is “thrilled” it creates an option for county residents who regularly commute to Mobile to use the new bridge for an average one-way toll of under $1.
Construction and financing
Construction details for ALDOT’s plan are as follows:
- The project’s main features include a new six-lane, cable-stay bridge with a minimum of 215 feet of air draft clearance over the Mobile River. The high-level approach spans for the bridge will start just east of Virginia Street in Mobile and end between the Bayway bridges. The following interchanges will be reconstructed to improve traffic flow: Broad Street, Virginia Street, Texas Street, Canal/Water streets and U.S. 90/98 in Daphne.
- The new Bayway will run approximately 7.4 miles, and will be elevated approximately 12 feet higher than the current Bayway to meet federal storm surge requirements. The existing Bayway will remain open and free throughout the construction of the new Bayway.
- To keep the Wallace Tunnel toll-free, toll gantries – overhead scanners – will be located at the Mid-Bay interchange. This location, according to ALDOT, ensures that tolls are only charged for vehicles using the new infrastructure, and that traffic does not stop while passing under the gantry.
ALDOT expects to use the following funding sources to pay for the project:
- $1.2 billion through bond financing.
- $1.1 billion in federal loans through the Transportation Infrastructure Financing and Innovation Act (TIFIA).
- At least $250 million in state funding.
- $125 million from a federal Infrastructure for Rebuilding America (INFRA) grant awarded in 2019.
- $500 million in anticipated federal Mega grant funding that is available through the bipartisan infrastructure plan signed by President Joe Biden in November.