JRS said:
Questions for structural engineers:
Was the deck suspended from the canopy and if so, what percentage? What was the intent for the canopy curve? (It is reminiscent of a retractable metal tape measure.) Why did the deck not have any similar feature to increase stiffness? Is it fair to refer to deck as a ribbon? How much capacity was in the moment of the deck between the pylon pier and 10/11 node? Did FIGG depend on that moment? Why was steel avoided on span for the sake of ease of maintenance but lots of it was used for the pipe faux stays? Why was the sorter span designed exactly like longer span? I.E. same deck thickness, same diaphragm sizes, same canopy, same number of truss members. The long span was about 910 lbs per inch. What about the short span?
1) the deck is not really suspended from the canopy. The canopy is in compression and the deck in tension (but pre-compressed so the deck concrete is in compression but the PT is in more tension for a net tension force). It is all part of a truss system. Just like when you were a kid bending an eraser until the bottom split in tension and the top was in compression (then your teacher gets made at you for wrecking your eraser).
2) The deck did not have the same features primarily for functionality. The canopy also needs more curve and depth to minimize buckling since it is the element that has a compression member force. The curve also allows for a longer spanning length. You can say the concrete in the deck is also in compression but PT can't actually buckle the concrete that it compresses (unless you have external PT).
3) It is a ribbon in the sense that it was a tension member (although pre-compressed so the PT is more like a ribbon). It also had a significant local bending force to transfer the loads to the diagonals of the truss. Seemingly contrary to my comment above there is some load that hangs but it is not really "hanging from the canopy".
4) The moment on the deck was only relied upon for the local loads and not the bridge as whole. The deck could not span 175' without the truss action.
5)The faux pipes could be allowed to corrode to some degree. Maintenance could be slack. The coverage on the pipes was relatively small but I have to say, access to the pipes would not be easy.
6)A different design could have been done for the shorter span. However, the back span (the shorter span) helped the longer span out. With the canopy and deck lining up, you get a negative or hogging moment over the support that reduced deflection. It also helped reduce the shear demand at the underside of #11. But it also increases the loads on the diagonals which were also under designed. The truss shape was to allow clearance for the roadway while not having to raise the deck too high. You would need a taller elevator, more stairs, a longer walk for people, etc. It is also not as clunky looking as a concrete girder. The shorter answer is that it looked better to the designer and client.