WpgKarl
Structural
- Jul 15, 2007
- 81
A guy in my office (who isn't an engineer by the way) had a theory. I believe the bridge spanned over the river without intermediate supports....one would have to assume that there would be some pretty significant expansion joints at each end of the bridge, due to the very long span.
Now let's just say that the work that was being done on deck repairs happened to cause the one or both of the expansion joints to fill with debris and that it was no longer capable of performing per the original design intent.
It was a pretty hot day the day the bridge collapsed....perhaps it tried to expand, but was restrained causing a large build-up of force. To relieve that force, perhaps one of the weakest members in the system buckled, starting a chain reaction (due to a lack of redundancy) which led to the bridge failure? Sounds plausible to me...anybody else's thoughts?
Would this bridge have had more than 2 expansion joints?
Now let's just say that the work that was being done on deck repairs happened to cause the one or both of the expansion joints to fill with debris and that it was no longer capable of performing per the original design intent.
It was a pretty hot day the day the bridge collapsed....perhaps it tried to expand, but was restrained causing a large build-up of force. To relieve that force, perhaps one of the weakest members in the system buckled, starting a chain reaction (due to a lack of redundancy) which led to the bridge failure? Sounds plausible to me...anybody else's thoughts?
Would this bridge have had more than 2 expansion joints?