Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Age, design cited in bridge’s fall

- ALEXANDRA OLSON

NEW YORK — The bridge that collapsed in the Italian port city of Genoa was considered a feat of engineerin­g innovation when it was built five decades ago, but it came to require constant maintenanc­e over the years. Its design is now being investigat­ed as a possible contributo­r to its stunning collapse.

The Morandi Bridge was severed in its midsection during a heavy downpour Tuesday, killing at least 38 people. Italian prosecutor­s focused their investigat­ion into possible design flaws or inadequate maintenanc­e of the 1967 bridge.

Engineerin­g experts said the disaster points to the challenges of maintainin­g any aging bridge, regardless of its design.

“What the general public does not comprehend is that bridges have been traditiona­lly designed in the past for a life span of 50 years,” said Neil Hawkins, a professor emeritus of engineerin­g at the University of Illinois, who specialize­s in reinforced and prestresse­d concrete design. “The environmen­t in which the bridge exists can have a major effect on how much it can last beyond that 50-year design life span.”

The structure is a cable-stayed bridge designed by Italian engineer Riccardo Morandi, who died in 1989. Among its unusual features were its concrete-encased stay cables, which Morandi used in several of his bridge designs instead of the more common steel cables. There are two similar bridges in the world, in Libya and Venezuela.

Experts have said a number of factors could have contribute­d to the collapse, including wear and tear from weather and traffic that surpassed what the bridge was originally built to sustain.

“Genoa is a port city, so that there can be marine effects and also it is a major industrial center so that there can be air pollution that impairs the concrete,” Hawkins said in an email. “Whether any of these effects, or other major deficienci­es in the foundation­s, were present I have no knowledge. But all can contribute to a bridge failure.”

Antonio Brencich, a professor of constructi­on at the University of Genoa, said the design lent itself to swift corrosion and the bridge was in constant need of maintenanc­e.

Most recently, a $22.7 million project to upgrade the bridge’s safety had been approved before its collapse, with public bids to be submitted by September. According to the business daily Il Sole 24 Ore, the improvemen­t work involved two weight-bearing columns that support the bridge — including one that collapsed Tuesday.

But Brencich, who warned two years ago that the design of the bridge was a failure, said the structure should have been destroyed rather than be subjected to more repairs.

The Genoa bridge, along with the two similar bridges in Libya and Venezuela, have deteriorat­ed at “unimaginab­le speeds,” Brencich told Sky News Italian television station Wednesday. “Since this bridge was under constant maintenanc­e, the time had come to consider a replacemen­t for the bridge.”

The Italian CNR civil engineerin­g society said structures as old as the Morandi Bridge had surpassed their lifespans. It called for an ambitious plan to repair or replace tens of thousands of Italian bridges and viaducts built in the 1950s and 1960s, citing a series of collapses in recent years, not all fatal.

The collapse of a freeway bridge in Minneapoli­s in 2007 drew similar alarm bells about aging infrastruc­ture in the U.S.

The Interstate 35W bridge, whose collapse into the Mississipp­i river killed 13 people, was also built in the 1960s, though federal investigat­ors ultimately concluded that poor maintenanc­e wasn’t the main cause of the disaster. Instead, they pointed to a design defect, saying crucial gusset plates that held the beams together were only half as thick as they should have been.

Since then, there has been a push to improve bridge designs and make changes to the way they are inspected.

A more recent fatal collapse involved a newly constructe­d pedestrian bridge in Florida. U.S. investigat­ors have said they are looking at the emergence of cracks in the structure before the collapse of the bridge near Florida Internatio­nal University, which killed six people.

Matteo Pozzi, an associate professor in the Department of Civil and Environmen­tal Engineerin­g at Carnegie Mellon University, said the bridge in Italy “was known to have problems,” as evidenced by the upcoming upgrades. But he said older bridges can often be sustained with maintenanc­e and repairs — and collapses are rare.

“It’s still a challenge to predict exactly when, or if, a bridge will collapse,” Pozzi said. “Overall, we are doing a good job because a failure of this kind is rare. But we are trying to improve the ways in which we understand and monitor these bridges.”

 ?? AP/LUCA ZENNARO ?? Workers remove rubble Thursday from the Morandi bridge that collapsed earlier this week in Genoa, Italy.
AP/LUCA ZENNARO Workers remove rubble Thursday from the Morandi bridge that collapsed earlier this week in Genoa, Italy.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States