Skip to main content

Toll option for new Cape Fear bridge

North Carolina councillors voted to leave option open for proposed structure
By Liam McLoughlin June 6, 2025 Read time: 2 mins
Cape Fear Memorial Bridge in Wilmington, NC (© Rzyotova | Dreamstime.com)

Councillors in North Carolina have left the option open for the proposed replacement Cape Fear Memorial Bridge to be a toll bridge.

Planning and development are underway to replace the Cape Fear Memorial Bridge in Wilmington. The bridge spans the Cape Fear River between Brunswick and New Hanover counties.

Councillors at the Wilmington Urban Area Metropolitan Planning Organization (WMPO) voted to leave the toll option open for the proposed new bridge by eight votes to four, according to local news outlet WECT.

The North Carolina Department of Transportation (NCDoT) says that the bridge replacement would help improve traffic congestion and mobility on a corridor that connects local communities and carries trucks transporting freight to and from the Port of Wilmington.

The proposed new bridge would cost an estimated US$1bn-plus to build. ITS International's sister title Global Highways previously reported that funding worth US$242m was being provided to NCDoT for the Cape Fear bridge replacement project in a funding package being delivered through the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, but this has come into doubt since the election of the Trump administration. 

The toll option would be one possible way of helping to fill any potential gap in funding.

NCDoT adds that the existing four-lane, steel vertical-lift bridge built in 1969 is becoming functionally obsolete and can no longer effectively service current traffic demands.

"While the existing bridge is safe, it is reaching the end of its lifecycle and must be monitored, inspected and maintained on a more frequent basis," NCDOT states.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • IntelliDrive and HOT lanes - the next generation?
    January 30, 2012
    Janet Banner, Metropolitan Transportation Commission, and Christopher Hill, Mixon Hill, Inc., outline efforts to explore the use of IntelliDrive technologies in HOT lane applications. On 21 October last year more than 100 transportation professionals came together for a workshop, either in person or via a webinar, to discuss the potential role of IntelliDriveSM technologies in enhancing the operations of High-Occupancy Toll (HOT) lanes. The discussions focused on a White Paper, commissioned by the Metropoli
  • MV helps agencies expand mobility options
    November 18, 2021
    Solution aimed at special transport needs integrates with passenger and scheduling software
  • Remix urges urban transport planners to Explore
    June 11, 2020
    Transport planning specialist Remix has launched a tool designed to help cities and transit agencies to reshape systems as the global pandemic changes mobility needs.
  • Enforcement ensures equity for toll road users
    January 25, 2018
    All-electronic tolling boosts traffic flow but introduces the tricky question of enforcement. Workable solutions are starting to emerge. Enforcement is an essential part of tolling and one of the most important ways for a mobility agency to keep faith with its investors, its community stakeholders and the vast majority of its users. It can also be one of the most unpopular and contentious things a toll authority has to undertake. If tolling is about paying for the roads, then everyone has to pay their