California

RIP #StevetheSinkHole, ‘Andy Asphalt' is Born: Highway 13 in Oakland Now Open

Rest in peace to "Steve" the sinkhole.

He was roughly 35 hours old.

At about 4:30 p.m. Tuesday, the California Highway Patrol announced the massive hole in Highway 13 at Broadway Terrace in Oakland was fully filled in with concrete, and drivers could now ride freely on the newly named "Andy Asphalt."

It was obvious the CHP was having a little fun with the agency's social media account, tweeting and Facebooking updates on the sinkhole officers nicknamed Steve. (Because, they said, why not?)

The sinkhole was reported on Monday at 5:20 a.m. after a weekend of pounding rainstorms. And Caltrans worked for more than a day to repair it by filling it in with concrete.

While East Bay drivers sure didn't enjoy single-tracking it along Highway 13, many on Twitter got some laughs over the naming of Steve, possibly the first sinkhole in the United States to be named.

CHP Oakland/@CHP Oakland via Twitter
Caltrans workers getting ready to fill up cement into the sinkhole. (Jan. 23, 2017)
CHP Oakland/@CHP Oakland via Twitter
A big pothole found on Highway 13 in Oakland hills at Broadway Terrace. (Jan. 23, 2017)
CHP Oakland/@CHP Oakland via Twitter
A CHP officer has named the sinkhole Steve. (Jan. 23, 2017)
CHP Oakland/@CHP Oakland via Twitter
Caltrans crews getting ready to fill up Steve the Sinkhole with cement. (Jan. 24, 2017)
CHP Oakland/@CHP Oakland via Twitter
It took 3 cement trucks to fill up Steve the Sinkhole. (Jan. 23, 2017)
CHP Oakland/@CHP Oakland via Twitter
Three cement trucks later, Steve the Sinkhole is finished. (Jan. 23, 2017)
CHP Oakland/@CHP Oakland via Twitter
The life of Steve the Sinkhole is ending near. (Jan. 24, 2017)

For example, Kristin Rasmussen tweeted: "The fact that the CHP named this sinkhole makes my day/week/year."

Officer Sean Wilkenfeld, the Oakland division's spokesman, acknowledged to NBC Bay Area that he is indeed the mastermind of and "stepfather" of Steve's creation.

"We constantly are putting out public safety messages," he said. "And I get it, sometimes they get lost in the jumble. Sometimes you gotta' think outside the box."

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