Lethbridge Herald

Stress test possible factor in Florida bridge collapse

SEVERAL BODIES NOT RECOVERED YET

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Authoritie­s said Friday that the cables supporting a pedestrian bridge under constructi­on in Florida were being tightened following a “stress test” when the 950-ton concrete span collapsed over traffic, killing at least six people, injuring 10 others and flattening an untold number of cars.

Officials expected to find more bodies in the rubble. People who haven’t heard from their loved ones congregate­d near the scene Friday.

Jorge and Carol Fraga drove from West Palm Beach, fearing their relative’s car was trapped beneath the bridge at Florida Internatio­nal University. Sixty-year-old Rolando Fraga, Jorge’s uncle, lives in the area and frequently takes the nearby turnpike to work, but no one has heard from him since mid-day Thursday.

“The waiting is so ... I don’t have words for that,” Carol Fraga said through tears.

The $14.2-million project was supposed to be a hallmark of the faster, cheaper and less risky method of bridge-building promoted by the university. Slated to open in 2019, it would have provided safe passage over a canal and six lanes of traffic, and created a showpiece architectu­ral feature connecting the FIU campus and the community of Sweetwater, where many students live.

As state and federal investigat­ors worked to determine why the fiveday-old span failed, Florida politician­s pointed to the stress test and loosened cables as possible factors, and a police chief asked everyone not to jump to conclusion­s.

“This is a tragedy that we don’t want to re-occur anywhere in the United States,” said Juan Perez, director of the Miami-Dade police. “We just want to find out what caused this collapse to occur and people to die.”

On Twitter, Miami-Dade Police asked people to contact the homicide bureau with any informatio­n about a cause.

A Florida Internatio­nal University student was among the fatalities, and several constructi­on workers were among the 10 people injured. One person died at a hospital, and Perez said five bodies were located with the help of cameras but not yet retrieved from vehicles crushed under the immense slab. No identities have been released.

“We’re not even going to talk numbers anymore because we expect to find other individual­s down there,” Perez said.

Miami-Dade Mayor Carlos Gimenez said crews had conducted a “stress test” on the span earlier in the day, and Sen. Marco Rubio tweeted that the engineerin­g firm involved had ordered the tightening of cables that had become loosened. “They were being tightened when it collapsed,” Rubio said on Twitter Thursday night.

Experts from the National Transporta­tion Safety Board and the Occupation­al Safety and Health Administra­tion joined police in taking over command of the scene Friday from first responders, who had spent hours racing to find survivors in the rubble of the 175foot span using high-tech listening devices, trained sniffing dogs and search cameras.

Florida Gov. Rick Scott said Thursday investigat­ors will get to the bottom of “why this happened and what happened,” and if anyone did anything wrong, “we will hold them accountabl­e.”

Rubio, who is an adjunct professor at the school, noted the pedestrian bridge was intended to be an innovative and “one-of-a-kind engineerin­g design.”

When finished, the bridge would have been supported from above, with a tall, off-centre tower and cables attached to the walkway. That tower had not yet been installed, and it was unclear what builders were using as temporary supports.

Andy Herman, a bridge engineer and former president of the American Society of Civil Engineers, told The Associated Press that its socalled “accelerate­d bridge constructi­on” has been used for years without problems.

He said municipali­ties like this method because it allows for building a bridge faster “because you’re doing a lot of the work in a centralize­d location where you don’t have to worry about being over traffic and then they drive it or lift it into place over the traffic with minimal downtime - so the advantage is that they can build it faster with less disruption to traffic.”

 ?? Associated Press photo ?? A worker uses a saw next to a crushed car under a section of a collapsed pedestrian bridge Friday near Florida Internatio­nal University in the Miami area.
Associated Press photo A worker uses a saw next to a crushed car under a section of a collapsed pedestrian bridge Friday near Florida Internatio­nal University in the Miami area.

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