Is INTERSTATE 5 Safe?
INTERSTATE 5 in California has a Condition Score of 0/100 (Grade F). The deck is rated 0/9, superstructure 0/9, and substructure 0/9. The bridge is classified as structurally deficient under FHWA criteria. Built in 1958 (68 years old), it carries approximately 279K vehicles per day.
INTERSTATE 5 carries an F on the BridgeSafety Condition Score with 0/100 — the bottom tier of the FHWA NBI distribution. Component ratings flag the structure for near-term rehabilitation or replacement; the bridge may remain open to traffic but is on the priority list for action.
The bridge was built in 1958 and is now 68 years old, at or past the typical 50-year design life for bridges of its vintage. Maintenance and inspection cycles are correspondingly more involved than for newer structures. INTERSTATE 5 carries an average daily traffic count of 279,000 vehicles, with 14 lane(s) crossing Myford Creek. The owning agency is State Highway Agency; bridge inspection records flow into the federal NBI database annually.
BridgeSafety reads the FHWA National Bridge Inventory (NBI) — the authoritative federal dataset covering every public road bridge longer than 20 feet in the United States. Each bridge record includes age, structural condition by component, traffic load, and the formal sufficiency rating that determines federal funding eligibility.
The Structurally Deficient designation flags bridges where at least one primary component (deck, superstructure, substructure) is rated in poor condition on the FHWA 0-9 scale. FHWA explicitly notes that bridges with this designation remain open and safe when they meet load-rating requirements; the designation signals rehabilitation need, not closure.
What the Condition Score Means
INTERSTATE 5's Condition Score of 0/100 falls in the F tier. One or more primary components rate at the bottom of the NBI scale. State DOTs typically respond to ratings in this range with weight postings, accelerated inspection cycles, immediate repair work, or in some cases lane closures. The score is descriptive of inspection findings and is the trigger for federal replacement funding eligibility — it is not, by itself, a closure determination.
INTERSTATE 5 is currently classified as structurally deficient under FHWA criteria, meaning at least one of its load-carrying components scores 4 or lower on the NBI 0-9 scale. This federal classification determines eligibility for replacement and rehabilitation funding through the Bridge Investment Program and state formula funds. It is a condition-based label, not a safety determination. Bridges in this category remain open at state-set posted loads while their ratings are addressed.
Component Ratings
| Component | Rating | Scale |
|---|---|---|
| Deck | 0 | /9 |
| Superstructure | 0 | /9 |
| Substructure | 0 | /9 |
| Overall Score | 0/100 | Grade F |
FHWA scale: 9 Excellent, 7 Good, 5 Fair, 4 Poor, lower readings indicate progressively worse condition. Component ratings reflect the most recent inspection submitted to the National Bridge Inventory.
Age and Traffic Context
INTERSTATE 5 dates to 1958, making it 68 years old. The structure is past the 50-year mark commonly used as an FHWA cutoff for older inventory. Bridges in this age range often appear in state DOT replacement plans because cumulative deterioration and changing design standards (lane width, load capacity) make replacement more cost-effective than continued rehabilitation.
INTERSTATE 5 carries roughly 279K vehicles per day, a heavy traffic volume that places it among the higher-priority structures in the inventory for maintenance allocation. Heavy daily traffic accelerates deck wear, joint deterioration, and accumulated fatigue on superstructure elements, which is why busy interstate and arterial bridges often appear on rehabilitation priority lists.
Bridge Details
Frequently Asked Questions
Is INTERSTATE 5 safe to cross?
INTERSTATE 5 remains open to traffic at posted load limits set by the owning state DOT. Its current Condition Score is 0/100 (Grade F). NBI condition ratings describe observed physical condition; they are not closure or safety determinations. State DOTs and the FHWA bridge program are the authoritative sources for any operational restriction on a specific structure. The bridge meets the federal definition of "structurally deficient" — a funding-eligibility classification — but this does not mean it is unsafe at posted loads.
What do the deck, superstructure, and substructure ratings mean?
On the FHWA NBI 0-9 scale: 9 is Excellent, 7 Good, 5 Fair, 4 Poor, and 0 means the component has failed. INTERSTATE 5 rates deck 0/9, superstructure 0/9, and substructure 0/9. The deck is the riding surface; the superstructure carries loads from deck to bearings (girders, beams, trusses); the substructure transfers loads to foundations (piers, abutments). A rating of 4 or lower on any of the three triggers the "structurally deficient" classification.
When was INTERSTATE 5 last inspected?
Federal regulation requires inspection at least every 24 months by a certified team leader. Inspection records flow from the California Department of Transportation to the FHWA NBI; the dataset on this page reflects the 2025 federal NBI release, refreshed April 2026. For the most recent inspection report or any operational status (postings, lane closures), the California DOT is the authoritative source.
Is INTERSTATE 5 structurally deficient?
Yes — INTERSTATE 5 is currently classified as structurally deficient because at least one of its three primary load-carrying components rates 4 or lower on the NBI 0-9 scale. The classification is condition-based and determines federal funding eligibility; it is not a safety or closure determination.
Where can I see official inspection records for INTERSTATE 5?
The Federal Highway Administration publishes the underlying inspection data through the National Bridge Inventory (https://www.fhwa.dot.gov/bridge/nbi.cfm). The California DOT publishes additional state-level reporting and operational notices. The ASCE Infrastructure Report Card provides national-level analysis that draws on the same NBI data.