Try GOLD - Free
HOW TO REBUILD A HIGHWAY IN 12 DAYS
Popular Mechanics US
|November/December 2025
The engineering ingenuity that turned the fiery collapse of one of I-95's busiest stretches into a Philly-style comeback miracle.

IN the predawn hour of June 11, 2023, Nathaniel "Nate" Moody steered his 18-wheeler northbound on Interstate 95 in northeast Philadelphia. The 53-year-old Army veteran, with cropped, graying hair and a wide smile, had driven a truck for a decade and owned his own rig. He was local to the Philly area, married with three children. That morning, he had a routine job: delivering 8,500 gallons of gasoline to a nearby Wawa station.
But as Moody navigated the exit onto westbound Cottman Avenue, he lost control of the vehicle on a turn near the end of the exit. The tanker flipped onto its side and skidded to a halt directly under a section of I-95. The crash ruptured the tank, and sparks ignited the gasoline. The truck exploded. A massive fireball shot into the sky, followed by billowing plumes of black smoke. Moody died instantly.
In no time, an inferno overtook the truck, reaching temperatures as high as 2,500 degrees Fahrenheit. The fire under I-95 acted like a barbecue grill, holding the heat and cooking the steel girders beneath the roadway. In less than 15 minutes, the beams began to buckle until they failed.
A 104-foot-long, four-lane stretch of I-95 collapsed onto Cottman Avenue, setting off a chain of events—requiring unprecedented cooperation between the government and private contractors and filled with handshake agreements, round-the-clock work, engineering ingenuity, and a determination to get the job done fast—that led to one of the most dramatic, high-stakes construction jobs in modern American history.
FOR OFFICIALS FROM THE PENNSYLVANIA Department of Transportation, work was the last thing on their minds that morning. June 11 was a Sunday, two weeks after Memorial Day weekend, the holiday that morphed into the unofficial start of summer. It was also supposed to be the hottest day that week, reaching nearly 90 degrees Fahrenheit. Some swapped the city heat for beach breezes an hour's drive away at the Jersey Shore.
This story is from the November/December 2025 edition of Popular Mechanics US.
Subscribe to Magzter GOLD to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 10,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
MORE STORIES FROM Popular Mechanics US

Popular Mechanics US
WARP SPEED
THE TOTALLY INSANE, HIGHLY IMPROBABLE, BUT NOT AT ALL IMPOSSIBLE QUEST TO BUILD A WARP DRIVE.
13 mins
November/December 2025

Popular Mechanics US
A Lifesaving CRISPR Treatment
LIFE'S ABILITY TO COPY billions of distinct letters in a genome is an absolute biological wonder—but mistakes are made. Genetic disorders and birth defects occur in one in every 33 babies in the U.S., according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
1 mins
November/December 2025

Popular Mechanics US
Quantum Gravity
TWO PHYSICISTS ARE CLAIMING TO HAVE moved closer to a unified theory of gravity.
2 mins
November/December 2025

Popular Mechanics US
LIFE IS SHORT.GET THE GOOD STUFF.
There's a giddy excitement that hangs in the air around the PopMech offices when it comes to gear, especially during our annual awards season.
13 mins
November/December 2025

Popular Mechanics US
The Identity of the Dragon Man
FINALLY, AFTER YEARS OF STUDY, THE REAL identity of the Dragon Man has been discovered.
3 mins
November/December 2025

Popular Mechanics US
A Wall Full of Skeletons
WHEN THE WALLS OF a 15th-century Portuguese church collapsed during poor weather, they revealed more than just dust and debris—they exposed at least 12 skeletons stashed inside the walls.
1 mins
November/December 2025

Popular Mechanics US
HOW TO REBUILD A HIGHWAY IN 12 DAYS
The engineering ingenuity that turned the fiery collapse of one of I-95's busiest stretches into a Philly-style comeback miracle.
16 mins
November/December 2025

Popular Mechanics US
Why Orange Cats Exist
GARFIELD MIGHT BE THE MOST ICONIC orange tabby cat around, but he has so far refused to give up orange tabbies' most guarded beauty secret-how do they get their auburn coats? Hiroyuki Sasaki, a cat enthusiast and geneticist at Kyushu University in Japan, was determined to identify the elusive gene that carries the orange mutation in Felis silvestris catus (the domesticated cat).
1 mins
November/December 2025

Popular Mechanics US
Kei Trucks
REGON IS VYING TO ALLOW JAPANESE Kei trucks on public roads.
2 mins
November/December 2025

Popular Mechanics US
GIVE YOUR OLD WOODEN WINDOWS A SECOND LIFE
WITH A LITTLE DIY MAINTENANCE, YOU CAN EXTEND THE LIFE OF YOUR EXISTING WINDOWS WITHOUT SPENDING THOUSANDS OF DOLLARS ON REPLACEMENTS.
5 mins
November/December 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size