Arlington Memorial Bridge stonework gets a little love in Maryland

(WTOP/Michelle Basch)

Arlington Memorial Bridge between D.C. and Virginia is undergoing its first major overhaul since it opened in 1932, and some of its parts have been moved to Maryland to get some special attention.

Some 2,320 pieces of stone taken from the bridge’s south elevation are now sitting in a stone yard in Upper Marlboro near Joint Base Andrews.

They include curbs and balusters, which are pillars that make up part of the bridge’s railing.

Many of the stone pieces are getting pressure washed, and some are getting a deeper clean.

“We are doing some localized microabrasion,” Lindy Gulick, an architectural conservator with the National Park Service, said during a tour of the yard.

The trick is not to get them too clean.

“We don’t want a perfect white stone. That’s not what we’re looking for,” Gulick said, adding, “We really like this 90 years of patina.”

Some stone pieces need to be repaired or replaced.

One repair technique called a dutchman involves replacing part of a damaged stone with new stone that fits perfectly.

Another technique — a pinning repair — can be used to fuse broken pieces of stone back together. Holes are drilled, metal rods are placed inside, and epoxy is used to hold both halves together.

The bridge was built with Mount Airy granite from North Carolina, and if stone needs replacing, Gulick said the same granite is being used.

The bridge rehab project remains on schedule, with a new construction phase set to start this fall and final completion expected in 2021.

(WTOP/Michelle Basch)
These columns are called balusters, and there are a lot of them remaining to be cleaned, repaired and prepped to go back into place. (WTOP/Michelle Basch)
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A wide shot of the stone yard in Maryland. (WTOP/Michelle Basch)
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This chunk of granite has a unique key design that you just wouldn’t be able to see if you were driving past the bridge. (WTOP/Michelle Basch)
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Lindy Gulick, an architectural conservator with the National Park Service, shows off one type of repair being made to some of the granite pieces. (WTOP/Michelle Basch)
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The stone on the left is dirty, and the stone on the right is clean. The cleaning is done with high-pressure water mixed with tiny bits of glass. (WTOP/Michelle Basch)
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Stone waiting to be cleaned is on the left, but the key is to not get it too clean. It’s important to keep some of the “patina.” (WTOP/Michelle Basch)
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The column on the left is broken, and will be repaired with a perfectly sized piece, as was done for the column on the right. (WTOP/Michelle Basch)
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Another type of repair involves taking two broken pieces and inserting a rod, then using epoxy to mold the pieces back together. (WTOP/Michelle Basch)
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WTOP’s Michelle Basch reported from Upper Marlboro, Maryland

Michelle Basch

Michelle Basch is a reporter turned morning anchor at WTOP News.

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