The 'Chef Menteur Pass' is a narrow natural waterway which, along with the
Rigolets, connects
Lake Pontchartrain and
Lake Borgne in
New Orleans, Louisiana.

View across Chef Menteur Pass with the Highway 90 Bridge
In the days of sailing ships, much commerce from the
Gulf of Mexico came through here and the Rigolets into Lake Pontchartrain to New Orleans and surrounding communities.
Chef Menteur Pass was long guarded by
Fort Macomb, now an abandoned ruin on the western side of the Pass. Two bridges span the Pass. The automobile bridge, constructed in 1929, carries
U.S. Highway 90; the portion of this road between central New Orleans and the Pass was long known as "Chef Menteur Road" before the route became a
U.S. highway, and portions are still known as "Chef Menteur Highway. A
railroad bridge also spans the Pass a short distance south of the highway bridge.
The Lake Catherine Neighborhood of New Orleans is to the east side of the Pass. The
Venetian Isles neighborhood of New Orleans is to the west of the Pass.
This area was hit hard by
Hurricane Katrina in 2005. the Highway 90 Bridge was closed from the day of the hurricane on 29 August 2005 until repairs allowed it to reopen on 11 August 2006.