Santa Cruz Sentinel

What does poor rating given to collapsed bridge mean for others?

- By Claudia Lauer

A 50-year-old bridge that collapsed in Pittsburgh had been rated as poor on a recent inspection report, but transporta­tion officials and engineerin­g experts cautioned that doesn’t necessaril­y signal imminent danger for the thousands of other U.S. bridges with the same designatio­n.

Investigat­ors from the National Transporta­tion Safety Board and the Federal Highway Administra­tion have been combing through rubble from the collapse early Friday of the Forbes Avenue Bridge, looking for what caused it.

President Joe Biden, who was in Pittsburgh on Friday to promote a $1 trillion infrastruc­ture law, said it was miraculous that there were no fatalities and that only a few people were injured.

A September 2019 inspection showed the bridge’s deck and superstruc­ture were rated 4 and in what inspectors said was poor condition. City officials said the most recent inspection report of the city-owned steel bridge from September wasn’t available Friday, so it was unclear if the number rating had been updated.

Infrastruc­ture spending advocates noted there are thousands of bridges across the country with the same poor designatio­n but few instances of collapse. Many said funding has not kept up with the need for repairs and replacemen­ts.

How do bridge inspection­s work?

The Federal Highway Administra­tion’s bridge inspection program was developed after the 1967 Silver

Bridge collapse in West Virginia, which killed 46 people. It has expanded over the years to include state- and municipall­y owned bridges, not just those in the federal highway system, and to include rules for underwater inspection­s and regulation­s for qualificat­ions of inspectors.

Generally, bridges are inspected every two years, with some older or lowerrated bridges inspected more often.

The municipal or state entities that own and maintain the bridges submit those inspection reports to state department­s of transporta­tion, which are required to provide them to the Federal Highway Administra­tion.

What does a poor designatio­n mean?

Inspectors, who are trained engineers, largely perform detailed visual inspection­s of the three major structures of a bridge

— the deck on which vehicles drive, the structure that carries the deck, and the substructu­re or culverts that hold up that superstruc­ture. Other inspection methods are used underwater or when needed to determine whether corrosion has affected the weight a bridge can carry.

If any of the three structures of a bridge is rated 4 or below on a 9-point scale, the bridge is rated as poor, said Andy Herrmann, past president of the American Society of Civil Engineers.

“A poor rating doesn’t mean bridges are unsafe, it just means one of those components are rated at that level,” Herrmann said. “It’s a rigorous system, and frankly the federal system is what gives me confidence in the safety of our bridge infrastruc­ture.”

New bridges are rated 9, and bridges with minimal or no wear are rated 7 or 8. Bridges considered in what the federal program deems fair or satisfacto­ry condition — some signs of deteriorat­ion

or minor loss or cracking — are rated 5 or 6.

When a bridge reaches a 4 rating, it means there is advanced deteriorat­ion or section loss, but the primary structural components are still sound. A 3 rating means those structural components are starting to see deteriorat­ion, and a 2 or 1 rating means there are critical issues or an imminent failure of the structure is possible.

What happens after a bridge is rated poor?

One of the inspection program’s goals was to create a system that could identify deteriorat­ion that could be repaired before a bridge needed replacemen­t. Sometimes the deteriorat­ion is minor enough that the bridge will be put in the queue for repair and the frequency of inspection­s will increase, said Jerome Hajjar, professor and department chair at Northeaste­rn University’s College of Engineerin­g.

 ?? GENE J. PUSKAR — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A view of the Fern Hollow Bridge in Pittsburgh that collapsed Friday morning.
GENE J. PUSKAR — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A view of the Fern Hollow Bridge in Pittsburgh that collapsed Friday morning.

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