- Cruise ships left the Port of Baltimore for the first time since March 26.
- The port’s terminal was blocked after the Francis Scott Key Bridge collapsed and killed six workers.
- Rebuilding the bridge will take four years and could cost up to $1.9 billion.
Two months after Baltimore’s Francis Scott Key Bridge collapsed, cruise ships are now taking off from the Port of Baltimore.
A Royal Caribbean ship called Vision of the Seas left from the port on Saturday for a trip to Bermuda. And a Carnival Cruise ship called Pride destined for Greenland and Canada left Baltimore on Sunday.
The two trips are notable as the first cruise ships to leave Baltimore since the port was blocked by the collapse of the Francis Scott Key Bridge on March 26. The bridge collapsed after being hit by a cargo ship, killing six workers. The Francis Scott Key Bridge services about 30,000 people a day.
“We’ve been working through this process for the past two months,” Jonathan Daniels, the director for the Port of Baltimore said in a video posted to X on May 25 by the port.
One week ago, the port’s terminal was the headquarters for the recovery operations for the Francis Scott Key Bridge, Daniels added. The terminal is also a massive area of tourism for Maryland, bringing in 440,000 cruise passengers a year, Daniels told the Baltimore Sun.
The project to rebuild the Francis Scott Key Bridge will take four years and is estimated to cost between $1.7 billion and $1.9 billion, a spokesperson for the Maryland Department of Transportation said in May 2023.