San Francisco Chronicle

New bridge’s sensors to provide valuable data on earthquake­s

- By Christophe­r Weber

LONG BEACH — A replacemen­t bridge under constructi­on at the second-busiest port in the U.S. isn’t just a crucial route for cargo trucks and Southern California commuters — it’s a concrete-and-steel science experiment for engineers and seismologi­sts.

The new bridge, which will stretch 8,800 feet over the Port of Long Beach, is being built with about 75 seismic sensors that will measure the forces imparted on the span when one of several nearby faults set off an earthquake. It will replace the Gerald Desmond Bridge, though it’s unclear if it will retain that name.

The new bridge is due to open next year.

“New bridges don’t come along very often, so it’s exciting,” said John Parrish, head of the California Geological Survey. His agency’s Strong Motion Instrument­ation Program will be among those crunching the informatio­n the sensors capture. The data will be added to the state’s database of earthquake knowledge.

California’s bridges and other infrastruc­ture have been outfitted with quake sensors called accelerome­ters since the 1970s. The eastern span replacemen­t of the Bay Bridge that opened in 2013 has more than 200.

But the building of the new Long Beach span, south of Los Angeles, marks the first time the sensors have been incorporat­ed into the design of a California bridge from Day One, said Duane Kenagy, an engineer and the port’s interim deputy executive director.

The original bridge has taken a “pretty good beating” since it was built in 1968, Kenagy said. Evidence of that is the netting — called “diapers” — recently placed underneath to capture hunks of concrete that regularly break away. The roadway is “reaching the end of its natural life” but is considered safe for traffic until the new bridge opens, he said.

About 15 percent of all containeri­zed cargo entering the U.S. travels over the span daily, and it’s a key artery for motorists traveling between the city of Long Beach and San Pedro, a working-class waterfront neighborho­od on the southern edge of Los Angeles.

Its nearly $1.5 billion replacemen­t is historic for the built-in seismology and because it’s the first cable-stayed vehicle bridge in California. Cable-stayed bridges are distinct from more common suspension bridges in that the main span deck is entirely supported by cables connected to the twin 515-foot towers. It makes for a particular­ly sturdy design that’s been tested to withstand powerful earthquake­s or a terrorist bombing.

“You just can’t knock one of these things down by knocking out one or two cables,” Parrish said. The design, popular in Asia and parts of Europe, is catching on in the U.S. as larger constructi­on machinery and new high-tech materials make them cheaper and easier to build.

Designed to last 100 years, the new bridge has a higher clearance for larger cargo ships and elastic “points of isolation” that enable segments to move independen­tly without damaging other sections. Joints and bearings are designed to break under stress and are easily replaceabl­e to get the bridge reopened quickly after a violent shaking shuts it down.

The old bridge will be torn down. It had no sensors, so seismologi­sts and engineers are eager for the informatio­n the new span will provide.

The span is just a few miles from two active faults — Newport-Inglewood and Palos Verdes — capable of quakes in the range of magnitude 6.5 to 7. A magnitude 6.4 quake along the nearby Newport-Inglewood fault leveled Long Beach in 1933. And a megafault, the infamous San Andreas, is only about 50 miles away at its closest point.

Data recorded by the sensors — a quake’s magnitude along with how fast the ground is moving and at what trajectory it hits the bridge — are sent via the state’s Integrated Seismic Network to scientists at state offices in Sacramento as well as UC Berkeley and Pasadena’s California Institute of Technology. Christophe­r Weber is an Associated Press writer.

 ?? Jae C. Hong / Associated Press ?? The Port of Long Beach bridge under constructi­on will be equipped with 75 seismic sensors.
Jae C. Hong / Associated Press The Port of Long Beach bridge under constructi­on will be equipped with 75 seismic sensors.

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