http://www.miamiherald.com/news/local/community/miami-dade/article205422719.htmlStress test may have contributed to collapse of FIU pedestrian bridge
just news jargon. Stress tests are what you do on a treadmill to check your heart.http://www.miamiherald.com/news/local/community/miami-dade/article205422719.html
So what actually goes into a "stress test" for this type of bridge?
Ah, ok. I did read this morning from an other article that "engineers" noted that some cables had come loose and needed to be tightened. There were 2 workers on the bridge doing this work when it collapsed.just news jargon. Stress tests are what you do on a treadmill to check your heart.
Are you suggesting the accelerated bridge program will fail its "stress test" too?Ironically, FIU has an accelerated bridge program
https://abc-utc.fiu.edu/
this won't help the program much.
nothing wrong with the accelerated bridge concept. I'm not getting where the cables some into play here, but I suspect it's the fundamental concept of the bridge design that did not' mesh well with the accelerated process of setting it in place in one piece after construction.No one has any patience to follow the traditional process anymore. Sometimes (owners of the projects, government, private, etc) people just need to be willing to slow down and operate at a normal pace. these days no one wants traffic impacted, or delays to students walking to school, but the focus on these types of projects usually revolves around what the quickest / fastest way to do this is without making anyone suffer travel delays through lane closures..
I am sure this idea was pitched as an awesome "overnight" way to get the bridge up, but what would the real impacts have been to doing this "the old fashioned way" (which is usually the way that works best) I mean you could have close the road at night to set some traditional beams, there was room to build a center support structure - but that wouldn't have been "sexy"...
With six lanes of traffic below this pedestrian bridge I suspect that its a busy road and closing lanes to construct the bridge would certainly impact traffic here.II would argue that a new ped bridge doesn't really have the same urgency as replacing a roadway bridge which is open to traffic and you have massive impacts to the surrounding network when the bridge is out.
Well, it's certainly impacted now.With six lanes of traffic below this pedestrian bridge I suspect that its a busy road and closing lanes to construct the bridge would certainly impact traffic here.
Looks like they also designed the Zakim bridge here in Boston.The firm that did the design also designed the "sunshine skyway bridge" in Tampa - so you would like to think they know what they are doing?
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