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dik (Structural) said:Looks like someone is clamming up, From Fox News:
“The city attorney is advising us not to speak about anything to do with the bridge,” said Sandra Antonio, a spokeswoman for the city of Sweetwater,
...National Transportation Safety Board had forbidden engineers or contractors from talking about the project pending its investigation.
A FIGG spokeswoman, Cheryl Stopnick, said it would be “inappropriate to discuss specific detail about bridge design” during the investigation.
A spokeswoman for FIU did not immediately respond Tuesday to questions about the pylon relocation in the bridge design.
Happy as a clam...
Dik
bimr said:This is not a 'conspiracy',
jrs87 said:I wish NTSB all the best with this one.
dik (Structural) said:It's not luck they need... hopefully, they can come up with an explanation of the cause of the failure. If not, they can speculate on the possible cause (and identify it as a reasonable, possible cause), but, the report should not have to stipulate on an exact cause. They should strive for that, but, not be 'driven' by it.
Dik
wiktor said:The known facts are:
1.Bridge design as per AASHTO Guide Design Specification for Pedestrian Bridges, and AASHTO 2015 (Drawing B-2)
2.Overall SF factor (DLx1.25+PLx1.75)/(DL +PL)=1.35
So, applying blindly the code it's not the best idea. I do not think that the authors of the "design guide" envision a pedestrian bridge with such ratio of DL to PL.
Any bridge suppose to have a minimum SF of 1.7 or above for bending, and 2 for shear.
And under-reinforced transition from blister to the deck was not ductile - it was relying on the shear strength of uncracked concrete
winelandv said:who in their right mind allows a crew to work on 150ksi PT rods on a non-redundant structure without closing traffic????