Maui - The last thing we need to encourage is speculation by bridge engineers not familiar with this specific bridge. There are many different bridges and 99% of bridge engineers today are only familiar with the typical slab and girder overpasses. It would not speak well of them (or others) to offer opinions on this collapse.
Unclesyd - The Hoan bridge is in Milwaukee!
As I read the posts from the beginning I can't beleive some of the writings actually belong to engineers. It's true that infrastructure is aging and needs to be dealt with but some of the rants and raves posted here are no better than lay people, media Zealots or meteorologists.
As for Architects - they should also refrain from commenting, shop drawing review or not as should the folks I've listed above. Experience with steel design especially with buildings be they large, deep plate girders acting as transfer girders doesn't play into this since there is virtually no fatigue cycling in that environment. Fatigue and Fracture Mechanics is a specialty area of engnieering and those who've had a course in it (as I have) will tell you that it is far from exact science and requires dedicated study.
As for the history of the bridge, we scour what we can from teh web, but has it occurred to anyone that we're barely scratching teh surface? This bridge could have been retrofitted or rehabbed for other purposes and we have no idea what or how it could have been modified or how those modificatinos affected the original behavior.
So please let's not act like the very people we curse upon hearing mis-information.
Regards,
Qshake
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