oldestguy - Fishy indeed. Sounds like the DOT / Contractor are "blowing smoke" until they can figure out what to do next. As someone who grew up in a bridge-building family and had a stint as a bridge-builder myself, this whole project "stinks".
The ENR story says that inspectors have been reporting settlement of Pier 3 for 10 years. The substructure was rated "poor" in May.
I looked up the prime contractor "Walsh Construction Co.". They appear to be a large experienced firm with a long record of successful bridge projects. I wonder if they sent their amateurs to handle this project?
1. One thing my father taught me: Do your foundation (substructure) work first, at least until it is above ground / water. On this widening job, the Contractor appears to have detoured traffic, removed necessary parapets and bridge deck, roughened the surface of existing piers...
then started work on the footings.
2. The bridge had settlement problems, but notice in the following photo that the traffic detour and parapet / deck removal are putting eccentric loading on the existing footings:
3. The eccentric loading is in the opposite direction than the "lean"... or is it? At least one girder is "off its rocker" (IMHO, Contractor too). Is the entire pier settling with the "lean" caused by a combination of pier settlement and the missing rocker? In the following photo notice that much of the deck, not just the edge appears to have settled:
As usual, there is likely much more to this story and much of my speculation will be flat wrong. I do believe the bottom line is that this problem will
not be "fixed" by mid-September. I'll come back here and "eat crow" if it is.
![[r2d2] [r2d2] [r2d2]](/data/assets/smilies/r2d2.gif)