Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. People also ask

  2. The Interstate 35W Bridge in Minneapolis, filled with rush hour traffic, plunged into the Mississippi River below. Thirteen people died, and 145 others were hurt. Monday marked 15 years since...

    • Do You Remember What You Were Doing The Hours Before Everything Happened?
    • I Just Can't Even Imagine What You Were Thinking and feeling.
    • Were You Conscious at That Point?
    • And You Were Severely hurt.
    • How Do You Do That?
    • Well, You've Had to Kind of Learn How to Live Life as A Survivor.
    • How's It Feel to Be Here Right Now Today?
    • What Do You Want People to Remember on This Day?

    I worked at a group home with adolescents and I was the independent living skills coordinator. And so that particular day, Wednesday, we always had an ILS group. And it was actually a really good group. Everyone was in a good mood, I left a little bit later than I usually do. And then started my drive home.

    Lots of swear words. And then, you know, my only rational thought was like, I'm driving on concrete. So I'm gonna land on the concrete. And I just assumed that my body would, you know, be done as soon as it landed. And I didn't really conceptualize falling into the river. And then what that would have in store for me.

    I stayed conscious the whole time. My car immediately filled with water, so I had to find my way out through murky water and everything was closed up. All the windows were still intact, that I had felt. And it really was some kind of miracle, I guess, that something gave way. At some point in my search for a way out, I kind of stopped looking for a...

    Yes, so I had a broken back. The swim — everything that I did afterwards was pure adrenaline — I didn't feel anything. And then as I started to sit on the bridge, waiting for help, my back started to really get painful. And so that kept me in the hospital for five days. My PTSD was definitely my biggest injury, the most invisible but the most signi...

    That's a really good question. A lot of the time, it's about reminding myself that I am safe. Like that time that I was sitting on this little rickety stage at a café, I thought for the first moment that it was an earthquake, that the ground was shaking, and I was like, “Oh, my gosh, there's an earthquake happening.” Nobody else was responding or r...

    I mean, just a couple of months after I remember saying things like, “Oh, I'm gonna be good, I'm fine.” I wasn’t. I was just a shell of a human being at that time. I wasn't feeling anything, I wasn't feeling joy, I wasn't feeling sadness, I was just existing, breathing, eating, but not much else. And I didn't really unpack and grieve and really fee...

    It's OK. I really wanted there to be a memorial as a person who didn't lose a loved one, I don't have a place to go. You know, in the same way, somebody might have a gravesite or another memorial for their loved one, I didn't have a place. And so having this here is just a nice place for me to feel like connected and to feel like I can grieve in th...

    I think the thing that's always been really important to me about telling my story or just sharing is making sure the story remains human that it's a human story. For so many years afterwards, it became a brick and mortar story. It became about building bridges or making sure infrastructure is in place. And yes, 100 percent that is really important...

    • MPR News
  3. Aug 1, 2022 · Fifteen years later, Minnesota photographer remembers I-35W bridge collapse Stacy Bengs was a student at the U of M on Aug. 1, 2007. She was just blocks away from the I-35W bridge when it...

    • 3 min
    • minnesota bridge collapse anniversary1
    • minnesota bridge collapse anniversary2
    • minnesota bridge collapse anniversary3
    • minnesota bridge collapse anniversary4
    • minnesota bridge collapse anniversary5
  4. Jul 30, 2017 · Here’s a look at what happened, what’s changed since then, and how Minnesota is marking the anniversary: THE COLLAPSE. The Interstate 35W bridge was one of the busiest in Minnesota before it fell Aug. 1, 2007. First responders scrambled to rescue survivors from the debris, including a school bus carrying 52 students and several adults.

  5. The memorial was revealed to the public on August 1, 2011, the four-year anniversary of the collapse. Minnesota Governor, Mark Dayton and Minneapolis Mayor R. T. Rybak were present, and both spoke at the reveal. The ceremony included reading the names of the 13 victims, followed by a moment of silence held at exactly 6:05 p.m., the time of the ...

  6. Jul 30, 2017 · Here's a look at what happened, what's changed since then, and how Minnesota is marking the anniversary: THE COLLAPSE. The Interstate 35W bridge was one of the busiest in Minnesota before...

  1. People also search for