The Telegram (St. John's)

Bridge collapse puts spotlight on rapid building technique

-

As the 950-ton concrete bridge section was swung into place over a highway last weekend, Florida Internatio­nal University officials were beaming with pride.

The pedestrian bridge on the edge of the Miami-area campus was a signature achievemen­t of the school’s Accelerate­d Bridge Constructi­on University Transporta­tion Center, a research group set up with federal funding a few years ago to show how spans could be built faster and cheaper in the U.S.

“FIU is about building bridges and student safety. This project accomplish­es our mission beautifull­y,’’ FIU President Mark B. Rosenberg boasted that day. “We are filled with pride and satisfacti­on at seeing this engineerin­g feat come to life and connect our campus to the surroundin­g community.’’

Five days later, the bridge collapsed onto the busy sixlane highway, crushing cars and killing at least six people in a tragedy now under federal investigat­ion.

While it’s not yet clear what caused the failure of the unfinished span Thursday, the disaster has cast a spotlight on a rapid constructi­on technique widely used around the U.S.

Accelerate­d bridge constructi­on, or ABC, involves assembling large sections of a span offsite, then moving the massive pieces into place all at once.

The technique eliminates the lengthy road closings and other traffic disruption­s that can result when a bridge is built out over a highway piece by piece. It is also considered by some engineers to be safer for hardhat workers and motorists because much of the constructi­on isn’t done in the middle of traffic.

The general approach has been around since the mid19th century — and has been used safely and successful­ly for a long time — but interest in ABC has increased in recent years as states have looked for quicker, less expensive ways to replace thousands of aging bridges.

In the case of the Florida tragedy, engineerin­g experts said the question is where was the fatal mistake: in the design of the bridge, in the way its constructi­on was carried out or in the materials used?

Civil engineerin­g experts who viewed photos of the planned structure and the collapse have raised questions about how FIU and its contractor­s approached the project.

To some bridge engineers, the decision to install the span’s main concrete segment over a busy road before building its main support tower was puzzling. Traditiona­lly, the tower is constructe­d first, and the walkway or roadway is anchored to it with cables.

“It’s odd,’’ said Henry Petroski, a professor of civil engineerin­g at Duke University and a leading authority on engineerin­g failures. “That’s probably why they used this so-called ABC method, so they could get the span over the roadway in one operation, because if you do it incrementa­lly, you have to interrupt traffic.’’

Investigat­ors will also be looking at the companies building the project, a collaborat­ion between MCM Constructi­on, a Miami-based contractor, and Figg Bridge Design, based in Tallahasse­e. Both companies have been involved in constructi­on accidents before.

FIGG was fined in 2012 after a section of a bridge it was building in Virginia fell and injured several workers. Virginia’s labour department later fined Figg for constructi­on violations, and a subcontrac­tor sued accusing the firm of negligence and poor design. MCM was accused of substandar­d work in a lawsuit filed this month by a worker injured when a makeshift bridge the company built at the Fort Lauderdale airport collapsed under his weight.

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? Workers stand next to a section of a collapsed pedestrian bridge, Friday, March 16, 2018 near Florida Internatio­nal University in the Miami area.
AP PHOTO Workers stand next to a section of a collapsed pedestrian bridge, Friday, March 16, 2018 near Florida Internatio­nal University in the Miami area.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada