AlanLord
Structural
- Nov 19, 2014
- 26
I have to pour the deck slab of a skew bridge soon. After reading a bit of the literature out there on the subject, I’m getting a little nervous about the proper sequence of concrete pour to follow (i.e. perpendicular, parallel to skew, or staggered perpendicular pour).
I have a 260’ single-span 50’ wide bridge on 5 girders 10’deep, and a similar one with the same span, but 37’ wide on 4 girders; both with a skew of 39°. The slab to pour is 9" thick.
The steel installed was a hybrid of no-load fit and steel load fit, and we’re having to live with permanent girder top flange lateral displacements of ½” under steel load, and anticipated concrete pour displacements of ¾” , for a permanent total dead load lateral displacement of 1.5”
I'd appreciate the suggestions of someone who has a lot of experience pouring the decks of skew bridges.
I'm in Montreal, Canada.
I have a 260’ single-span 50’ wide bridge on 5 girders 10’deep, and a similar one with the same span, but 37’ wide on 4 girders; both with a skew of 39°. The slab to pour is 9" thick.
The steel installed was a hybrid of no-load fit and steel load fit, and we’re having to live with permanent girder top flange lateral displacements of ½” under steel load, and anticipated concrete pour displacements of ¾” , for a permanent total dead load lateral displacement of 1.5”
I'd appreciate the suggestions of someone who has a lot of experience pouring the decks of skew bridges.
I'm in Montreal, Canada.