ajk1
Structural
- Apr 22, 2011
- 1,791
I recently came across a case of 4 bollards placed around a light standard in a parking lot, where a car had driven too close to one of the bollards and the bollard became embedded behind the fender. This happened because the fender flexed when the car brushed against it, allowing the bollard to become trapped behind the fender (just in front of the front wheel) and not allowing the car then to move forward or backward. The bollards were short and glavanized (silver in colour). The incident happened at night. Thousands of dollars damage was done (to the vehicle's wheel mechanism, and the body too of course).
The original architectural design of the protection to the lamp standard when the bulding was built in the 1960's was with wood posts and horizontal wood bumpers spanning between the posts, at the top of the posts. This seems like a much better design than what was done by a contractor in a repaving project about 10 years ago, and would have prevented the recent incident.
I have searched the provincial building code and it does not turn up the word "bollard". None of the references to "guards" are for a bollard type of guard.
Question:
Is there any guide to good bollard design anywhere?
- If the bollard had been higher, it would not have been able to get behind the fender; it would have caused body damage but not the extensive mechanical damage that it did to the wheel linkage etc.
- If it has been painted yellow, it would have been more visible.
- If it had horizontal wood bumpers between the bollards at their top (like the original design by an architect), the bollard could not have become embedded behind the fender.
The original architectural design of the protection to the lamp standard when the bulding was built in the 1960's was with wood posts and horizontal wood bumpers spanning between the posts, at the top of the posts. This seems like a much better design than what was done by a contractor in a repaving project about 10 years ago, and would have prevented the recent incident.
I have searched the provincial building code and it does not turn up the word "bollard". None of the references to "guards" are for a bollard type of guard.
Question:
Is there any guide to good bollard design anywhere?
- If the bollard had been higher, it would not have been able to get behind the fender; it would have caused body damage but not the extensive mechanical damage that it did to the wheel linkage etc.
- If it has been painted yellow, it would have been more visible.
- If it had horizontal wood bumpers between the bollards at their top (like the original design by an architect), the bollard could not have become embedded behind the fender.