Cellpic Sunday—Rising Over the Harbor

Corpus Christi’s new Harbor Bridge opened in June/July 2025

October 2025.
Corpus Christi, Texas.

Last week I featured the Pecos River Bridge, noting that while it’s no longer the tallest in Texas, it still holds the record for the highest bridge deck at 273 feet (83 m). The new Harbor Bridge in Corpus Christi, now open to traffic, reaches 205 feet (63 m) above the bay. Designed with twin pylons and a cable‑stay system, it has become the tallest bridge in the state and a defining feature of the city’s skyline. From this spot near the base, the bridge’s scale is evident, its white cables standing out against the Gulf Coast backdrop and the industrial waterfront below.

US 181 Harbor Bridge-2
Broader view of the eastern approach

A second view, taken from farther east, shows more of the bridge’s eastern approach stretching across the flat coastal plain. The western deck, though not pictured, extends across the ship channel toward downtown Corpus Christi, bringing the total roadway length to about 6.4 miles (10 km). The main cable‑stayed span measures 1,661 feet (506 m), and the twin pylons rise to 538 feet (164 m), making it the tallest structure in South Texas. That clearance allows larger ocean‑bound vessels to pass beneath, reinforcing the bridge’s role in supporting the Port of Corpus Christi. Built for longevity, the design life is estimated at 170 years and includes six traffic lanes, a median, shoulders, and a shared‑use path for pedestrians and cyclists.

The massive deck makes the Harbor Bridge one of the longest cable-stayed bridges in the United States. Designed to replace the aging 1950s-era Harbor Bridge, the new structure accommodates taller ships and heavier traffic, linking Corpus Christi’s industrial port with the city’s expanding skyline.

About the photos: Since I couldn’t get an aerial shot to show the bridge’s massive size, I settled for a couple of ground-based images. Both of these photos are panoramic views at a 9×21 aspect ratio, but they aren’t multiple exposures; they’re just highly cropped single images. Captured with my Samsung S25 Ultra in Pro mode, the DNG files were minimally processed in Adobe Lightroom and then sent to Luminar Neo for a tweak with Accent AI, my most frequently used tool in Neo’s toolbox.

I invite fellow bloggers to join in by creating their own Cellpic Sunday posts. There’s no set theme. The first rule is that your photo must be captured with a cell phone, iPad, or other mobile device. The second rule is simple: link your challenge response to this post or drop a comment here with your link so others can find it. And remember, despite the name, there’s no penalty for sharing on a day other than Sunday.

John Steiner

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