I think they were also behind schedule and had to have the bridge open by a certain date. So they had to rush finishing the deck figuring they could fix it in the spring.
I don't know enough about cable-stayed structures, I do pipelines - but something on CBC is really concerning me. They loaded cement blocks on the end of the bridge to bring the deck back down to the road surface. Do they have no expansion bearings? Is expansion and contraction engineered to be taken up by the cables?in many cases a failure like this is that the bolts fail one after another vs bearing load equally and simultaneously
sounds like a combination of thermal contraction stress at the interface combined with uneven loading (possibly torsional or twisting) to produce individual spot loads on bolts which failed one after another
likely design flaw or engineering failed to properly inspect construction specs, in any case the specialty failure analysis engineering firms get brought in to study and recommend fix and new standards so it doesn't happen again
I also heard they've ordered 10,000 rolls of Duct Tape and put out a call to Red Green. LOL!I don't know enough about cable-stayed structures, I do pipelines - but something on CBC is really concerning me. They loaded cement blocks on the end of the bridge to bring the deck back down to the road surface.
I imagine that the longitudinal camber designed into the bridge deck is the mechanism for taking up the linear expansion displacement.I don't know enough about cable-stayed structures, I do pipelines - but something on CBC is really concerning me. They loaded cement blocks on the end of the bridge to bring the deck back down to the road surface. Do they have no expansion bearings? Is expansion and contraction engineered to be taken up by the cables?
It would seem to me that the design is already proven to be a failure. Bringing the road surface up to the bridge deck may be the better plan. The witness says the deck went flying up into the air and then dropped to where it was resting at 60cm above the road. Two pickups flew off taking a nose dive into the road.
A "fix" that doesn't ensure that the failure can't happen again is just sheer stupidity.
This is an example of "how they used to build them":Is it just me, or is the phrase, "don't build them like they used too." becoming more and more common. It's even noticeable around here. For example. The 200st/hwy 1 interchange needed repairs virtually the day it was opened. And the bridge just south of #10 hwy/ pacific hwy. Was gutted and redone.
There is a bridge in NY built exactly the same way. With some upgrades after this bridge collapsed.
Not surprising.(snip) the expansion joints were manufactured in China."




