A story of great resonance in Seattle because of the condition of the Alaskan Way Viaduct and the storm-battered SR-520 floating bridge was the 2007 collapse of a highway bridge in Minnesota. That disaster sent a warning to politicians everywhere that a nasty surprise might be lurking in aging infrastructure near — or under — you. The operating assumption was that America's neglect of roads and bridges was the cause of the collapse.
Governors, like Washington's Christine Gregoire, were quick to wave the bloody shirt of the Minnesota mess to bolster arguments to embark and new megaprojects. We don't want a Minnesota disaster here, they'd warn Chambers of Commerce with a tone of foreboding.
But now we have the National Transportation Safety Board's final conclusion about what caused the collapse: turns out it was a design flaw exacerbated by putting too much weight on the bridge while crews worked on maintaining it (a preliminary finding suggested this last spring). In other words, it didn't collapse because it wasn't being care for, it fell down because it was being maintained. And it likely wouldn't have collapsed at all if it had been designed properly in the first place.
What the NTSB did discover is still serious: a flaw in how bridge design is reviewed. There may well be others around the country that are also poorly engineered. The main culprits in Minnesota were undersized gusset plates in the center of the span.The "gusset gap" is now symbolic of a hole in the review and inspection process that now looms as a greater priority than simply tearing down and replacing stuff because it's old. In other words, build stuff right the first time and rare incidents like the one in Minnesota won't occur.
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Comments:
Posted Mon, Nov 17, 3:43 p.m. Inappropriate
What's really interesting about the I-35W collapse is how quickly it was rebuilt: complete design/build project in 339 days. That's traffic moving at full speed in well less than one year.
For Christine Gregoire to wave a bloody shirt about the Minnesota bridge smacks of rank hypocrisy. Total up the years folks have been calling for a new 520 bridge, a new Viaduct, new ferries (huge and ugly issues on that score), and more.
If she really could lead she'd wave less and build more. Maybe then we could get something worthwhile in 339 days. Instead, all we're getting is her dirty laundry flapping in our faces for a hell of a lot longer than 339 days.
The Piper
Posted Mon, Nov 17, 4:46 p.m. Inappropriate
The rebuilding of that bridge had emegency funding, for an actual emergent need, earmark to somewhere, that doesn't have the same ring to it.
Design reviews of older bridges may be less costly then rebuilding stuff out of fear that it is like something else.
Posted Mon, Nov 17, 6:56 p.m. Inappropriate
I wonder how long their EIS and SEPA Review took? It must have bgeen measured in days not years like ours are in the State of Wsshington.
Posted Tue, Nov 18, 5:11 p.m. Inappropriate
Planned Obsolescence! WSDOT and the City of Seattle have wanted to tear the Viaduct down since the 70's for it's aesthetics.
WSDOY and the City never did preventative retrofitting. After the 1989 San Francisco earthquake, the Stae and City sent engineers down to see what we could learn. They said plenty. A report was written and a budget proposed of $300 million top retrofit the Viaduct. That fix never was done. Had it been, the Viaduct would have not been damaged in the Nisqually Quake. Pure negligence! The road bed is concrete. Have you seen any other concrete roads today that haven't been covered with asphalt? More planned deterioration. It's a shame! And lucky noone has been injured or killed.
So, RETROFIT IT NOW, severn years after the quake. The damage has been repaired and we are still driving on it. Fix it and we can continue to drive on it. WSDOT has BS'ed there way and everyone has been sucked in. If you think WSDOT is correct and has no other agendas, then you probably enjoy the off/on ramps that cross at many of our State interchanges creating the most hazzardous condition on our highways.
RETROFIT the Viaduct for less money, less disruption, maintaining the 110,000 vehicle trips/day and help make it a better neighbor with quieter roadbed paving, and using the under area for more pedestrin and recreational uses. Imagine a covered linear prominade from the Market to the Staduims and displaced parking moved into structured parking garages just east of the Viaduct.
THAT IS A SEATTLE SOLUTION!
Art