Times Colonist

Safeguards said to be in place to protect bridges in Victoria

- DARRON KLOSTER

Large ship strikes on Victoria’s main bridge are highly unlikely because of strict federal transport rules and safety measures in place around the span, says a structural engineer.

Jonathan Huggett, who was the project manager of Victoria’s Johnson Street Bridge, says the Victoria Harbour master requires front and rear tugs to guide all large ships and barges passing through Victoria Harbour and under the bridge. Their weights are restricted to 8,000 tonnes and speeds are closely monitored.

Like others around the world March 26, Huggett watched news of a massive cargo ship that lost power and struck a bridge in Baltimore, Maryland, causing the 2.6-kilometre span to collapse.

“My first reaction was ‘where are the tugs, and why was it travelling so fast,’ ” Huggett said in an interview.

The structural engineer said 100,000-tonne ships like the one in Baltimore, even after losing power, “still have enormous energy and there’s very little you can do to stop it … it’s better to deflect it because it takes less effort.”

He said the type of shipping in Victoria is vastly different. The traffic includes smaller ships and ferries going in for repairs at Point Hope Maritime shipyard and barges carrying aggregates to a cement plant or scrap steel from a recycling yard on the Upper Harbour.

But bridges here have been hit.

Huggett said since the Johnson Street Bridge officially opened on March 31, 2018, there have been only two “minor incidents,” where a tug passing under without the span raised miscalcula­ted its height and damaged a mast with telecom equipment, and a barge travelling out that banged off a pontoon deflector on the north side. Both operators paid for the minor damages.

The old Blue Bridge suffered ship impacts in 1958 and 2011.

Fendering, or deflection structures to protect the bridge, was an issue as overall costs ballooned to more than $105 million for the new Johnson Street Bridge. Concrete piers from the old Blue Bridge were used to build fenders on the south side of the bridge. On the north side, pilings were put in to support small pontoon fendering to bump off-course vessels back into the bridge channel.

The fendering performed as it should three years ago when a barge made contact, said Huggett, adding the fender was damaged but replaced at the operator’s cost.

Huggett said Victoria Harbour is small and most shipping destinatio­ns like Point Hope and the aggregates yards are in close proximity.

In 2015, the city paid for simulator exercises at the Pacific Maritime Institute in Seattle for all possible shipping traffic under different scenarios in relation to the bridge. “We even tried to crash into the bridge, but couldn’t,” said Huggett.

But he said the best safety method is the reliance on tugs to move vessels in and out. “If someone shows up without a tug, they won’t open the bridge. It’s saying go away and get that sorted,” said Huggett.

Huggett said some of the largest ships at Point Hope Maritime’s shipyard are B.C. Ferries vessels. The company used its own ship master and supervisor­s to bring the vessels in.

There is no fendering around the Point Ellice Bridge on Bay Street, but the channel is wider for ship and barge navigation.

 ?? DARREN STONE, TIMES COLONIST ?? Infrastruc­ture underneath the Johnson Street Bridge in Victoria.
DARREN STONE, TIMES COLONIST Infrastruc­ture underneath the Johnson Street Bridge in Victoria.
 ?? ?? General Registrati­on for Saanich July & August programs opens April 17 at 6am
General Registrati­on for Saanich July & August programs opens April 17 at 6am

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