I work in the bridge industry, first as a designer and now as a shop fabrication inspector/QA manager. I am a licensed PE, a CWI and have passed the NBIS Bridge Inspection training.
I don't know what happened.
I have some theories as to what could have happened but I don't have access to the information necessary to figure it out. I suspect it will take some time for the NTSB to find the critical initiation point.
I don't recall where, but I thought I saw a video of the bridge collapsing where it appeard the first span collapsed, then the middle span, and then the final span of the three span continuous steel deck truss bridge.
This causes me to believe there was a particular failure in the first span. The collapse of the middle and final spans was very possibly caused as a chain reaction to the collapse of the first span.
I don't have the time to discuss all the mis-information I am hearing. This is a technical subject, not unlike medicine or the law, which requires an individual to have a particular vocabulary. However, for some reason, everyone thinks that engineering is earthy enough that everyone should understand what it is about, I guess because they can put their hand on the problem. Any misunderstanding regarding engineering issues is frequently attributed to the engineer's inability to communicate. I believe it is most often the lack of knowledge on the part of the audience that causes them to think they understand what they just do not.
I recommend we all just sit back and let the NTSB and the Minnesota bridge community figure out what initiated the failure. The information will get to the proper authorities in due course. - Dinosaur