Sacramento’s I Street Bridge replacement is slipping to 2027 after bids came in about $100 million over budget
Sacramento CA – The I Street Bridge replacement is still alive, but bids came in far above estimates, pushing the long-planned project toward a 2027 start.
Sacramento’s long-planned I Street Bridge replacement was supposed to move toward construction this summer. Instead, the project is now looking at a likely delay into 2027 after bids came in roughly $100 million or more above the estimate.
The setback matters because the bridge is one of the most important links between downtown Sacramento, the Railyards area, and West Sacramento. It carries far more than car traffic. The replacement plan was designed to improve access for buses, bicyclists, and pedestrians on a corridor that already serves daily commuters and regional trips.
Why the bridge matters
The existing I Street Bridge is old enough that Sacramento has treated replacement as a public-works priority, not just a routine repair. The City of Sacramento says the project is intended to replace a structure that no longer works well for current vehicle volumes or for multimodal travel needs.
That makes the delay more than a scheduling problem. For people who cross the corridor now, it means the city will spend more time relying on an older bridge while the region waits for better connections between downtown, the Railyards, and the West Sacramento riverfront.
What changed
Just days before the bid shock, Sacramento City Council records show the city had moved forward with major funding and mitigation agreements tied to the project. That made the new cost overrun more significant, because the bridge had appeared to be advancing through a key pre-construction stage.
CapRadio reported that the bids came in about $100 million over budget and that the start of construction, once expected for summer 2026, is now likely to slide into 2027 unless the project is revised. CBS Sacramento also reported that the city is facing a delay and may need to reject or rework the bids.
What happens next
The main options now appear to be rebidding the project, changing the scope, adjusting funding, or some combination of those steps. Sacramento officials have not described the bridge as canceled, but they do appear to be confronting a project that is too expensive to move forward on the current terms.
That leaves several practical questions for residents and commuters. Will the city trim features to bring the price down? Will it seek more money? Or will it try again with a new bid package and a later construction window?
For now, the clearest takeaway is simple: the bridge replacement is still moving, but not on the timeline Sacramento and West Sacramento had been planning for. Drivers, transit riders, cyclists, and pedestrians who were expecting a summer 2026 start will likely be waiting longer for the improved crossing.
Sources
- CapRadio report on I Street Bridge bid overrun
- City of Sacramento I Street Bridge Replacement Project page
- Sacramento City Council April 14 agenda item on I Street Bridge funding agreements
- Sacramento City Express update on next steps for the I Street Bridge project
- CBS Sacramento report on construction delay
- Sacramento Transportation Authority active projects page