And the local authorities also have to be careful to not make the height detector too 'conservative'. After all, if it can be shown that the detector is forcing the rerouting of commercial vehicles unnecessarily, this could lead to official complaints if not actual legal challenges. And again, all of this talk about 'fixing' the bridge, will only mitigate but not eliminate the problem.
BTW, does anyone know what the minimum overpass clearance is on say the interstate system? What about municipal streets? I realize that if there are such standards and or even regulations, that this particular structure would have been grandfathered years ago, which brings up a question for the people out there might actually know. How much 'tinkering' with this bridge can they get away with before they reach a point where they are forced to simply replace it altogether? It's like where I live here in SoCal, in a desert environment, where wild fires are frequent. When our residential development was built back in the mid-to-late 70's, they were still allowing wood shake roofs. Now every 5th house or so had clay tile roofs (ours is one of those) but the rest were wood. Since then the laws have changed and wood shakes are no longer allowed, but they couldn't go in and force home owners with wood roofs to replace them. However, they did pass an ordinance that if a home owner attempts to replace more than a certain percentage of his wood roof with new wood shakes, then he must replace all of it with some sort of fireproof material. This protected people who needed to only make minor repairs while also protecting the community from people who replaced 90% of their wood roof with new wood shakes while saying they were only doing a minor repair. I'm not sure what this minimum percentage is as it was never going to be an issue with us. Since we moved into this neighborhood 32 years ago, virtually all of the wood roofs have been replaced with fireproof materials, but there are still a few holdouts who have gamed the system by only replacing small sections of their roof every couple of years. A few of them have probably replaced their entire roof more than once over already, but they're resisting out of principle, I guess. I suspect that if they had just bitten the bullet the first time there was any significant work done that they would saved money in the long run, to say nothing about getting a discount on their homeowner's fire insurance. And for the record, within our development, which this story was related to, there are 134 homes, and as I said, there's probably no more than five left with wood roofs.
John R. Baker, P.E. (ret)
EX-Product 'Evangelist'
Irvine, CA
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