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Stress test may have contributed to collapse of FIU pedestrian bridge
Miami Herald ^ | 15 March 2018 | By Jenny Staletovich, Rene Rodriguez And Joey Flechas

Posted on 03/16/2018 3:59:12 AM PDT by csvset

Aerial footage shows the aftermath of the FIU pedestrian bridge collapsing on Southwest Eighth Street in Miami on March 15, 2018. Pedro Portal Miami Herald In the hours after a 950-ton pedestrian bridge over Tamiami Trail collapsed Thursday afternoon, killing at least four people, civil engineers began to speculate about potential causes.

Was it a design error? Did something go wrong during construction?

The answer may be buried deep in the calculations made by workers who were conducting a stress test on the unfinished and vulnerable bridge. Any such test, experts told the Miami Herald, requires extreme care and precision to avoid overwhelming the structure. Too much weight on the bridge or over-tightened cables could cause problems.

The firms behind the project are Miami-based MCM and Figg Bridge Group, a well-known Tallahassee design company. Miami-Dade Mayor Carlos Gimenez said that crews were conducting a stress test on the bridge Thursday, and Miami-Dade Fire Rescue confirmed two workers were on the bridge when it collapsed.

The bridge was designed to enable students at Florida International University to safely cross the busy six-lane roadway between campus and a popular residential area. It was built using a method known as “accelerated bridge construction” — an innovative way to build bridges more speedily than with traditional building methods. While support columns were constructed on both sides of Tamiami, the 175-foot span was built on the side of the road. In a matter of hours Saturday morning, the span was installed onto the columns.

The accelerated bridge construction (ABC) approach has become more common in the past 10 years, particularly in urban areas with heavy traffic, said Ralph Verrastro, a Cornell-trained engineer and principle of Naples-based Bridging Solutions.

“That’s the driver and why ABC is so popular, because it allows you to keep the road open,” he said. “It’s more expensive to do, but it gains the advantage of keeping traffic moving and that’s what makes the phone ring at the mayor’s office.”

Aerial footage shows the aftermath of the FIU pedestrian bridge collapsing on Southwest Eighth Street in Miami on March 15, 2018. Pedro Portal Miami Herald

As was the case with the FIU bridge, the structure typically is assembled from pieces placed alongside the road before being moved into place. Cables running through the bridge slab that are tightened to strengthen the pre-fabricated portions are adjusted and stress tests completed before the pieces are moved over roads, for obvious safety reasons.

If workers were adjusting cables once the bridge was in place, the cables should not have connected to the bridge’s structural integrity, Verrastro said. “Once you’re done tensioning those cables, you’re done,” he said.

It’s possible the cables were over-tightened, causing the bridge to elevate slightly in what’s called a camber. Adjusting the cables to address camber would be appropriate, but that would not impact the structural strength.

“If they were adjusting the structural cables, it was to try to put more or less camber,” he said.

Still, adjusting the camber — called tuning the bridge — can be tricky. Robert Bea, a University of California Berkeley engineer and catastrophic risk expert, has studied hundreds of structural failings including the BP Deepwater Horizon. According to Bea, when workers adjusted the camber on a bridge in Australia in the 1970s, it also collapsed.

“The steel buckled while they were attempting to tune this camber, so it’s very plausible,” he said.

Another vulnerability: the span’s weight capacity. At this stage in the accelerated timeline, bridges typically need additional temporary support; engineers must not exceed weight limits during load-bearing tests.

“The loads have to be calculated precisely in the analysis to make sure the partial bridge would be able to carry them safely,” said Amjad Aref, a researcher at University at Buffalo’s Institute of Bridge Engineering.

Because precision is key, multiple factors may have contributed to the bridge failure. The investigation, Aref said, will need to examine the construction sequence, testing, environmental conditions such as wind and other possible factors.

“It might not be one factor,” he said. “It could be a combination of things.”

The bridge also had some unusual design features.

The bridge’s superstructure was something Verrastro said he’s not seen in 42 years of designing bridges. Rather than using steel trusses, it employed heavier concrete trusses. The bridge also had a concrete roof, adding even more weight.

“This was a very long span and then they used very heavy material,” he said. “The majority of pedestrian bridges are steel.” Steel bridges are about one-tenth the weight of concrete, he said.

FIU installed a new pedestrian bridge over the perilous Tamiami Trail in a single morning, part of a project to provide students a safe crossing and directly connect its main campus to Sweetwater. Pedro PortalThe Miami Herald

Verrastro, an expert in accelerated construction who has spoken at FIU’s bridge engineering program, suspects that using concrete was part of the bridge’s aesthetic, rather than structural, design. The FIGG Bridge Group that designed the bridge is known for its signature bridges, he said.

“They typically get involved in ones that look fancy, but they’re competent,” he said.

Using the accelerated process doesn’t necessarily change the design, just the construction, he said. However, it does require trained contractors who specialize in the method.

In almost all bridge or building collapses, he added, construction is at fault, not design. The flattened bridge will likely remain in place, he said, while a forensic engineer conducts an investigation.

While the accelerated bridge construction process is not well known outside the engineering world, FIU has become a hub for fostering the new approach.

FIU started a center to “advance the frontier” in the field in 2010 after identifying a need for more engineers trained in the method. Since launching in 2011, the center has drawn 4,000 people to its webinars, according to the website. In 2016, it became one of just 20 accelerated building programs nationwide to receive federal funding that amounts to $10 million over five years.

The center was not formally involved in constructing the pedestrian bridge.

The center’s director, Atorod Azizinamini, recognized by the White House in 2016 as one of the world’s leading bridge engineers, said the method is safer and more efficient than conventional construction methods.

“We are able to replace or retrofit bridges without affecting traffic, while providing safety for motorists and workers who are on site,” he said in a 2016 press release about the program. “The result is more durable bridges.”

But Bea was more skeptical of too much innovation.

“Innovations always bring potential ‘failure modes’ that have not been previously experienced,” he said.

VIew from a parking garage as crews continue working on rescuing victims of the FIU bridge collapse on March 16, 2018. Monique O. MadonMiami Herald

Herald staff writers Andres Viglucci and Douglas Hanks contributed to this article.


TOPICS: News/Current Events; US: Florida
KEYWORDS: abc; figg; fiu; fiubridge; mcm; miami; stresstest; sweetwater
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To: Gen.Blather

Since instead of a bridge they ended up building a wall across the road, which will stay there until the forensic engineering inspection is done, that traffic interruption clause just maxed out. Meanwhile the FIU admin honchos, who were pushing over the edge engineering on a mere Ped Bridge, to produce a bragworthy landmark for their engineering school - who cares what it costs, we’ll get Obamabucks - got the rep they deserved. Next we’ll learn whether anyone in FL will give them the Rap (sheet) they deserve.


61 posted on 03/16/2018 6:03:05 AM PDT by JohnBovenmyer (Waiting for the tweets to hatch!)
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To: healy61

Oops......wrong thread....I wondered where it went.


62 posted on 03/16/2018 6:05:27 AM PDT by Liz ((Our side has 8 trillion bullets;the other side doesn't know which bathroom to use.))
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To: lastchance

Like the eco retrofit that burned down the London high rise recently, green lemmings.


63 posted on 03/16/2018 6:06:06 AM PDT by JohnBovenmyer (Waiting for the tweets to hatch!)
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To: csvset
Just about every over pass I see on highways and local roads have steel beams. Why the need for a cable stayed bridge for this; what should have been a mundane pedestrian footbridge? Oh, the Feds are on the hook, let’s splurge ?

According to one of the articles I've read they went with concrete to reduce vibrations. Evidently it was going to more than an overhead walkway. They were going to have benches and WI-FI access points so students could hangout.

64 posted on 03/16/2018 6:11:48 AM PDT by EVO X
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To: csvset

Sounds like a problem with pre tightening and post tightening in relation to moving the bridge around. Sounds like they may have cracked it during moving.


65 posted on 03/16/2018 6:14:06 AM PDT by jetson
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To: csvset
I used to do construction and one mantra was "if you don't start out right,you don't end up right." This whole idea was a disaster from the get go.
66 posted on 03/16/2018 6:14:47 AM PDT by 4yearlurker ("There stands mother under the oleanders,open the windows." A dying cowboys last words,1879.)
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To: niteowl77

Concrete works great with compression loads. It fails easily under tension. The design most likely incorporated cables in the bottom of the beam/bridge that could be tightened to place the bottom of the beam/bridge in compression. I suspect the cables were tightened after the concrete cured and reached a specific strength. The tightening was calculated to allow the beam/bridge to be moved onto the piers. Then additional tensioning was applied to enable the bride to support additional loads other than the dead weight. During that process something got out of sync and the load exceeded what the concrete could withstand.


67 posted on 03/16/2018 6:16:33 AM PDT by meatloaf
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To: VTenigma

With VT in your screenname, I think you probably have a handle on this that’s not evident in other responses. Few people understand the post-tension concept. I first worked a building with post-tension concrete in 1987. Since then, it has made its way even into home construction as I have PT cables in the slab of my house that was constructed in 2008.


68 posted on 03/16/2018 6:18:02 AM PDT by T-Bird45 (It feels like the seventies, and it shouldn't.)
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To: trebb

Actually, I *am* an engineer, and that is what should have been done, traffic disruption or contact financial penalty be damned.


69 posted on 03/16/2018 6:21:01 AM PDT by nickedknack
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To: DuncanWaring
The bridge should have been strong enough to handle a full load of drunken college students, jumping up and down to see what happens.


Where could you find enough drunken college students who could jump up and down in unison?
70 posted on 03/16/2018 6:22:04 AM PDT by The_Media_never_lie (The MSM is the enemy of the American people.)
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To: csvset

Somewhere there exists an engineer who said don’t do this. He is soon to be fired


71 posted on 03/16/2018 6:22:13 AM PDT by BRL
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To: mewzilla

Stick to home ec,honey...no one dies.


72 posted on 03/16/2018 6:23:25 AM PDT by who knows what evil? (Yehovah saved more animals than people on the ark...www.siameserescue.com)
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To: csvset

Trumps tariffs caused this. They could not afford steel so went with concrete. /s


73 posted on 03/16/2018 6:25:41 AM PDT by pas
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To: niteowl77
Maybe the schools stopped teaching about empirical dead white guy engineering


Dead white guy engineering sent dead white guys to the moon, a feat that has not been repeated repeated in many years. It is also known as slide rule engineering.
74 posted on 03/16/2018 6:25:43 AM PDT by The_Media_never_lie (The MSM is the enemy of the American people.)
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To: shelterguy

Thanks Sherlterguy, you know exactly what I’m talking about. I used to get in trouble at my parties because all the guys were in the garage building or fixing something.


75 posted on 03/16/2018 6:29:01 AM PDT by Haddit (Minimalists Al Gore and Al Qaeda)
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To: The_Media_never_lie

Spring Break?


76 posted on 03/16/2018 6:31:23 AM PDT by DuncanWaring (The Lord uses the good ones; the bad ones use the Lord.)
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To: csvset

One would think there would some cctv footage of the bridge collapsing, particularly if “stress testing” was being conducted and FDOT officials were present at the time of the collapse.


77 posted on 03/16/2018 6:32:21 AM PDT by Godebert (CRUZ: Born in a foreign land to a foreign father.)
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To: csvset
FIU started a center to “advance the frontier” in the field in 2010 after identifying a need for more engineers trained in the method. Since launching in 2011, the center has drawn 4,000 people to its webinars, according to the website. In 2016, it became one of just 20 accelerated building programs nationwide to receive federal funding that amounts to $10 million over five years.

The center was not formally involved in constructing the pedestrian bridge.

The center’s director, Atorod Azizinamini, recognized by the White House in 2016 as one of the world’s leading bridge engineers, said the method is safer and more efficient than conventional construction methods.

Obama’s democrat government, spending democrat money, by democrat politicians in a democrat-controlled city in a democrat congressional district? “We don't need no stinkin’ engineers!”

78 posted on 03/16/2018 6:44:21 AM PDT by Robert A Cook PE (I can only donate monthly, but socialists' ABBCNNBCBS continue to lie every day!)
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To: Godebert

I did see some cctv footage at DailyMail.com

Marko


79 posted on 03/16/2018 6:45:24 AM PDT by markoman (Nothing hard liquor and a hammer won't fix)
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To: VTenigma
Agree the odds favor your #15 analysis.

It seems clear the erection schedule provided for the structure to be in place prior to installation of the mid-span column and support cables - without support at the bottom in order to facilitate auto traffic. Ergo, the design team had calculated the structure could span the gap with its dead load. One would suppose the structure could have been substantially post-tensioned while yet on the ground once the fabrication process was completed.

OTOH, what are the odds this was a Hyatt walkway type of failure?

80 posted on 03/16/2018 6:45:24 AM PDT by frog in a pot (Obama's "Remaking of America" continues apace in the absence of political opposition.)
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