qroger
Geotechnical
- Nov 17, 2002
- 1
Hello,
Today I visited a bridge over a railroad. It was 1941 vintage poured in place reinforced concrete. The curb under the poured guardrails was crumbling and the aggregate was coarse. The bridge was on a skew and the deck sections came out as parallelograms. They appeared to have been offset, possibly as if they were expanding in length. One of the poured guardrails was tilting. Under the bridge small stalactites of some mineral, possibly calcium carbonate were hanging under the deck. The aggregate is not limestone or dolomite, but the bridge may have been salted. What is going on and how close to collapse is the bridge?
Thanks,
Roger
Today I visited a bridge over a railroad. It was 1941 vintage poured in place reinforced concrete. The curb under the poured guardrails was crumbling and the aggregate was coarse. The bridge was on a skew and the deck sections came out as parallelograms. They appeared to have been offset, possibly as if they were expanding in length. One of the poured guardrails was tilting. Under the bridge small stalactites of some mineral, possibly calcium carbonate were hanging under the deck. The aggregate is not limestone or dolomite, but the bridge may have been salted. What is going on and how close to collapse is the bridge?
Thanks,
Roger