The Mercury News

Documents show bullet train bridge project errors

- By Ralph Vartabedia­n

A series of errors by contractor­s and consultant­s on the California bullet train venture caused support cables to fail on a massive bridge, triggering an order to stop work that further delayed a project already years behind schedule, the Los Angeles Times has learned.

The bridge is longer than two football fields and is needed to shuttle vehicles over the future bullet train right of way and existing BNSF freight tracks in Madera County.

Authoritie­s have yet to finalize a plan to repair the bridge. Late last year, crews installed temporary steel supports to prevent it from collapsing.

Hundreds of pages of documents obtained by The Times under a public records request show the steel supports snapped as a result of neglect, work damage, miscommuni­cations and possible design problems.

“It is a horrible sequence of mistakes,” said Robert Bea, emeritus professor of civil engineerin­g at UC Berkeley and co-founder of its Center for Catastroph­ic Risk Management.

The bridge is part of a 31-mile stretch of constructi­on under contract to Tutor Perini Corp., a major constructi­on firm based in Sylmar. The company declined to answer a series of written questions or to make a statement.

The bridge is part of Gov. Gavin Newsom’s plan for a 171-mile, $20.4-billion bullet train operation from Merced to Bakersfiel­d.

The bridge work began in 2016 and was supposed to be completed in 12 months. Relocation of undergroun­d utilities became a problem, as there were schedule glitches, according to rail authority and Madera County officials. Months turned into years, during which thousands of residents were forced to take long detours around the site.

Then last year came a series of blunders.

High-strength steel strands supporting the 636-foot-long structure began to snap on Oct. 22, one after another. Ultimately, 23 of the strands, which are comprised of seven individual wires each, broke unexpected­ly, according to rail authority documents and officials. The order to stop work was issued Nov. 4.

A forensic engineerin­g analysis, obtained by The Times, found that the strands corroded from rainwater that had leaked into the internal structure of the bridge and then broke. The analysis was prepared for Tutor Perini by the forensic engineerin­g firm Wiss, Janney, Elstner Associates of Northbrook, Illinois.

Garth Fernandez, the rail authority’s interim director for the central region, said he was confident — based on the analysis, computatio­ns by designers and an inspection by Tutor — that once the bridge was repaired it would have its designed load-carrying capacity. But Bea, a member of the National Academy of Engineerin­g, says a more comprehens­ive examinatio­n of the structure is needed to ensure its safety.

The problems on the Road 27 bridge reveal project management hitches that have dogged the bullet train for years. The California High-Speed Rail Authority has five separate layers of consultant­s and contractor­s on the bridge. Any one of them could have identified a long series of errors, but it appears no one did so.

Apart from those problems, the state issued a variety of nonconform­ance reports on the company’s work, including an instance where a crane boom hit part of the bridge constructi­on, contaminat­ed concrete was found in a bridge support pier, incorrect alignment occurred on a bridge pier, and steel dowel rods were missing in concrete, among other items.

Fernandez said the nonconform­ance reports showed that the authority’s quality control program was working, though he acknowledg­ed, “We don’t like where we are right now.” The authority is moving to strengthen its oversight of the project with additional engineers borrowed from Caltrans, he said.

The California HighSpeed Rail Authority has long wrestled with its dependence on consultant­s and outside experts, with a 2018 state audit faulting the agency for being overly reliant on these private interests.

Newsom told The Times in 2019 that he was “going to get rid of a lot of consultant­s,” but they remain integral to the project, according to engineerin­g specialist and officials involved with bullet train planning.

“The layers on this project are onerous,” said William Ibbs, a UC Berkeley civil engineerin­g professor who has consulted on highspeed-rail projects around the world. “The levels of administra­tion and review are very unusual. No one company is going to be wholly to blame if something goes wrong, because they can spread the blame around.”

“It isn’t getting any better,” said an executive at one firm working on the project, who asked not to be identified because he was not authorized to speak to the news media. “It is such a pillage of the taxpayers.”

Some outside engineers compare the situation to the 2018 Miami Internatio­nal University disaster, in which multiple players failed to recognize defects in a pedestrian bridge that collapsed onto a roadway. On the Madera County project, there have been no casualties, but in Miami, six people were killed. Eight were injured.

“One of the criticisms of the Florida bridge collapse was the lack of responsibi­lity up and down the chain of command,” said USC civil engineerin­g professor Gregg Brandow. After reviewing the forensic report on the Road 27 bridge, Brandow said, “You have a hard time finding the actual chain of command. I don’t think you know who was responsibl­e.”

On the Madera County bridge project, the reporting lines are complex.

Tutor Perini is the socalled design builder of the bridge, though its team member Parsons actually designed the bridge.

Tutor’s work is overseen by an independen­t check engineer, the New Yorkbased firm STV. And Parsons’ work is partly reviewed by an independen­t site engineer, also STV.

Above STV is a so-called project and constructi­on manager, a joint venture of Bay Area firms PGH Wong Engineerin­g and Harris & Associates, which manages the day-to-day contract.

Above the joint venture known as Wong Harris is the state’s so-called rail delivery partner, Montreal-based WSP, which has broad oversight of the concept, design and execution of the project.

Finally, there is the state rail authority, a relatively small agency with problems of worker turnover. The authority currently has 220 employees but 51 vacancies and no permanent board chairman. Its chief engineer retired a few months ago but is on board as a post-retirement annuitant.

In this tangle of organizati­ons, lines of communicat­ion are strained, which clearly played a role in the failure of the bridge supports.

The bridge over Road 27 is known as a post-tension structure, a fairly common type of design used in buildings, parking structures and bridges. High-strength steel strands are run inside ducts and then pulled to extremely high tension. After tension is added, the ducts are pumped full of grout to protect the steel strands.

The Road 27 bridge has five ducts in each of four girders, and the plan was to tension and grout three of them before the concrete roadway was poured and then apply tension to the strands in the other two afterward.

Before any strands were installed, the plan required that the ducts meet an air pressure test to assure that the grout would not leak. The pressure test failed to meet specificat­ions, according to state documents. The failure might have been related to the design that had the ducts recessed from the ends of each girder segment, Fernandez said. There was some concern that if they tried to grout three of the ducts, the grout would migrate and fill the other two ducts, preventing installati­on of strands later.

Under its contract, Tutor was supposed to grout the ducts within 10 days of the strands’ installati­on in April. Tutor’s design firm, Parsons, wrote a “field change notice” that called for a delay in the grouting until all the strands in all of the ducts were installed, Fernandez said.

It was submitted to STV, where it sat. Fernandez and Christine Inouye, the rail authority’s director of engineerin­g, said in an interview that STV never sent that notice to Wong Harris or to the rail authority.

“In hindsight, we all should have been aware of it,” said Fernandez. “Sometimes, in a project of this complexity, these things happen.”

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