In answer to dik, No, I'm not structural. I have spent most of my working career in the field, on the ground.
I have seen a lot of stuff go wrong. Today, everything is planned so that nothing breaks.
When I started, a lot of equipment was stressed to the breaking point.
You always asked yourself;
"If something breaks, where will it end up?"
"Don't be there!"
I always had a keen interest in the root causes of any jobsite failure as my future safety may depend on it.
Example, not a failure but an illustration;
We had a lot of anchor bolts to set in concrete for the structures of a substation.
The bolts were inserted into the holding templates and the nuts were spun on by hand to position the bolts vertically.
The templates were positioned on the forms and the concrete was poured.
A worker was tasked with removing the nuts in preparation to erecting the columns.
Why is it taking so long?
It only took half this long to place the nuts and the worker is only half finished.
When the concrete was poured, very small splashes of concrete were deposited on the threads of each bolt.
Now instead of spinning the nuts off by hand, there is just enough drag that each nut has to turned all the way off with a wrench. The worker was working hard but taking off now takes about 4 or 5 times as long as putting on.
What's the point?
The Florida crew has probably been installing the nuts for the most part by hand. They have probably done most of the post tensioning on this project.
It is possible that a spec of concrete or a grain of sand or other material became lodged in the threads and this nut could not be removed by hand.
I have seen too many crews that would keep increasing the tension trying to free the bolt to disregard this possibility.
If the excess tension pulled the anchor on the other end of the PT rod through the concrete, that may explain the failure of the strut and the spalling on the bottom of the strut.
This may not be the reason for the failure but it is too possible to be discounted offhand.
How about the concrete strength?
I have seen too many times concrete that did not meet the design strength. (Too much water makes it easier to work with.)
I have seen too many concrete samples that did not reflect the strength of the installed concrete. (Don't add the water until the inspector leaves with his sample.)
Stuff happens in the field.
Sometimes more stuff happens with design build projects.
Bill
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"Why not the best?"
Jimmy Carter