I've been posting in
the ORIGINAL Interstate Bridge Designs From Every State thread, informed by recent research and my own years of roadgeekery. I can be a bit slow on the uptake, but I just realized something...
Most over-the-freeway bridges are either steel plate girders, cast-in-place concrete tee beams (or box beams in some western states), or precast concrete beams. A few years into the construction of the Interstate system, many states increased their typical median width to sixty feet or thereabouts from the former forty to fifty. However, there was a period during which precast beams weren't used on bridges where the medians were that wide. Apparently, there was an upper limit to the viability of precast concrete at the span lengths required for sixty-foot medians. Without specifically re-researching the topic, I suspect that some states delayed the introduction of sixty-foot medians out of their attachment to precast beam bridges. I'm thinking Montana and Iowa off the top of my head, though there are plenty of others I haven't looked at closely.
Having said this, it appears that Florida may be a conspicuous exception to the rule.
This bridge, the first south of the Georgia line on I-75, was
built in 1961. The pre-widening median here was 62-64 feet, and the bridge is on a severe skew, as are many others on this stretch.
Obviously, it'd be ridiculous to argue that it was infeasible to build precast beams an extra five feet longer to accommodate an additional ten feet of median width, even if Florida and possibly others hadn't done so early on. Others, of course, followed a few years later. I've seen enough to make me wonder, though.
Oh, I mentioned a question: do you have any knowledge to impart or observations to make about this?