List Your Equipment For Free  /  Seller Login

NTSB Investigation Blames 'Design Errors' For FIU Pedestrian Bridge Collapse

Mon November 19, 2018 - Southeast Edition
NTSB


Samples of rebar recovered from the collapsed FIU pedestrian bridge await transport to the Federal Highway Administration’s Turner-Fairbanks Highway Research Center, where the samples underwent materials testing as part of the NTSB’s ongoing investigation of the March 15 fatal bridge collapse. (NTSB photo by Adrienne Lamm)
Samples of rebar recovered from the collapsed FIU pedestrian bridge await transport to the Federal Highway Administration’s Turner-Fairbanks Highway Research Center, where the samples underwent materials testing as part of the NTSB’s ongoing investigation of the March 15 fatal bridge collapse. (NTSB photo by Adrienne Lamm)

An investigative update issued by the National Transportation Safety Board Nov. 15, about its ongoing investigation of the fatal, FIU pedestrian bridge collapse in Miami, Fla., says errors were made in the design of the 174-ft. span and cracking observed prior to the collapse is consistent with those errors.

Six people died and eight others were injured when the bridge collapsed March 15, 2018. Eight vehicles were crushed in the collapse, seven of the vehicles were occupied.

The update states errors made were in the design of the northernmost nodal region of the span where two truss members were connected to the bridge deck. The design errors resulted in an overestimation of the capacity (resistance) of a critical section through the node, and an apparent underestimation of the demand (load) on that section. The design review was conducted by the Federal Highway Administration's Office of Bridges and Structures in support of the NTSB's ongoing investigation. The Federal Highway Administration is a party to the NTSB's investigation.

The Turner-Fairbanks Highway Research Center, part of the Federal Highway Administration, conducted numerous tests and examinations of concrete and steel samples taken from the bridge following its collapse. The concrete and steel specimens tested by Turner-Fairbanks Highway Research Center personnel met the project's build plans specified minimum requirements. Findings from the materials tests include:

Concrete core specimens from the bridge deck and bridge canopy met the compression requirements in the project plans.

The design plans specified concrete used for the project had to be in accordance with Florida Department of Transportation specifications. All specimens from the bridge deck and bridge canopy were within the specified range for total air content.

Tension test results of size #5, #8 and #11 steel reinforcing bars revealed all met minimum yield and tensile strengths and percent elongation at fracture for their respective sizes. Size #7 bars could not be tested due to collapse-induced deformation.

The NTSB's investigation of the bridge collapse is ongoing and the information contained in the investigative update is preliminary and will be supplemented or corrected as the investigation progresses. As such, no conclusions about probable cause should be drawn from the information contained in the investigative update.

The investigative update is available online at https://go.usa.gov/xPGnG.




Today's top stories

Des Moines Airport Works With Weitz/Turner On Expansion

ROMCO Equipment Co., SMT Acquire Bee Equipment Sales

San Francisco County Transportation Authority Bridges Retrofit Addresses Seismic Safety

Year in Review: Bobcat's Major Moments of 2024

MassDOT to Use Drones for Infrastructure Projects; Amherst Exploring New Downtown Designs

Iowa DOT's I-35 Project Includes New Bridges

JM Wood Holds December Auction in Montgomery, Alabama

DEVELON Set to Exhibit at ARA Show 2025


 







39.95234 \\ -75.16379 \\ Fort Washington \\ PA