The Punxsutawney Spirit

Bus video gives more info about Pittsburgh bridge collapse

- By Mark Scolforo

HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP) — Video footage from a bus of the bridge collapse in Pittsburgh this year shows one end of the structure had already fallen when an expansion joint at the other end was pulling apart, federal investigat­ors said Thursday.

The National Transporta­tion Safety Board issued an update on the Fern Hollow bridge collapse, saying the video is giving them more informatio­n about the sequence of events.

So far there’s no evidence of “widespread deficienci­es” in the “rigid K-frame superstruc­ture types” that form the bridge’s basic structure, the report said.

The investigat­ive update said that all aspects of the disaster are still being looked at and that the cause has yet to be determined. Investigat­ors plan mechanical and chemical testing on material samples and will examine plate dimensions and weld quality.

A preliminar­y report issued less than two weeks after the Jan. 28 collapse had found the collapse began at the structure’s west end and noted there had been no primary fractures in sections of welded steel girders considered “fracture critical.” A fracture critical area in a beam is the part most likely to show damage if the bridge has suddenly given way.

When the Forbes Avenue bridge gave way, it sent a city bus and four passenger cars down some 100 feet to a ravine carved by Fern Hollow Creek. Another vehicle drove off the east bridge abutment and landed on its roof.

Although the preliminar­y report had said a total of 10 vehicle occupants had been injured, the agency has now concluded that there were nine people in six vehicles. Two were injured seriously, two had minor injuries, four were not hurt, and the injury status of one person is uncertain, the agency said Thursday. No one was killed.

Natural gas lines ruptured and required the evacuation of nearby homes.

The 447-foot-long bridge, about 50 years old, showed some deteriorat­ion during an inspection in September, but not enough to require its closure. The bridge has had a 26-ton weight limit since 2014.

The future of the bridge is the topic of a virtual meeting Thursday night in which city officials and neighbors are expected to participat­e.

The Pennsylvan­ia Department of Transporta­tion has said up to $25.3 million in National Highway Performanc­e Program funds will be used to rebuild the structure. The state agency has posted images of the replacemen­t bridge’s “overall design concept.”

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