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Routine Bridge Maintenance Avoids Catastrophe

The fracture was discovered as crews worked on a $50 million project to paint and make structural repairs to the 80-ft. (24.4 m) high bridge connecting the Pennsylvania and New Jersey Turnpikes.

Wed February 08, 2017 - Northeast Edition
Lori Tobias


Pennsylvania Turnpike photo
Delaware River Bridge, Bucks County, I-276
Pennsylvania Turnpike photo Delaware River Bridge, Bucks County, I-276
Pennsylvania Turnpike photo
Delaware River Bridge, Bucks County, I-276 Pennsylvania Turnpike photo
This photo shows the severed truss member looking up from below the Delaware River Turnpike Bridge. The fracture affects a section of the bridge on the Pennsylvania side above Palmer Avenue. There are no residences or other structures beneath the bridge. Pennsylvania Turnpike photo
The complete fracture occurred on a 14-in. (35.6 cm) truss member beneath the deck, or driving surface, of the Delaware River Turnpike Bridge. The affected truss member is located just below the westbound right lane of I-276 on the west shore Pennsylvania Turnpike photo. Pennsylvania Turnpike photo
This photo show the splice plate installed to stabilize the fractured I-beam. The arrows indicate the gap where the fracture occurred. Pennsylvania Turnpike photo.
The gap now looks bigger because steel samples were cut off the edges of the fracture and sent to a lab for analysis. Pennsylvania Turnpike photo.
Due to a slight lowering of the span, the bridge will have to be jacked back into place, using 80 ft. (24.4 m) platforms.

Motorists accustomed to making the Delaware River Turnpike Bridge a part of their regular drive will have to adapt to some new travel habits for at least the foreseeable future. That news came nearly two weeks after a fracture was discovered in a bridge beam Jan. 20 during routine maintenance.

“This is a bridge that carries on average 42,000 vehicles a day,” said Carl DeFebo Jr., manager of media relations of the Pennsylvania Turnpike. “It is causing an inconvenience for travelers, but what is important to understand is that it is a critical safety issue and we need to make a great effort to make sure it is fixed right and safe for the long term. This is going to be a prolonged closure.”

The fracture was discovered as crews worked on a $50 million project to paint and make structural repairs to the 80-ft. (24.4 m) high bridge connecting the Pennsylvania and New Jersey Turnpikes. The fracture is in the top member of the steel truss on the approach span on the Pennsylvania side of the bridge.

“It's not a little crack,” said Tom Feeney, spokesman of the New Jersey Turnpike Authority. “It's a clean break. The steel member is displaced. It doesn't match up any more. It doesn't connect. It was a dangerous enough situation the bridge was closed immediately.”

Workers have since stabilized the beam by splicing it to prevent further movement. They are now in the process of trying to understand what caused the fracture.

“The engineering teams for the Pennsylvania and New Jersey Turnpikes have been really engaged in an assessment of the bridge and what happened,” DeFebo said. “Basically, the assessment includes a couple of things. There is an ongoing survey that involves human eye and HD video. There will be monitoring occurring that will include the actual device that can detect the load and stress of the steel. We also have taken samples of the steel from the beam in question and sent to two different labs for analysis.”

Joe Martin, professor of engineering at Drexel University, believes he has an idea of what went wrong.

“I've seen the pictures,” Martin said. “The bridge is 60 years old and it was riveted together. It's just funny the way they designed it. You don't load trusses at midpoint. When you take a truss, you load trusses only where all the pieces come together, but in this one they have a vertical load. It's not acting as truss; it's acting as a beam. Then they flipped the I-beam over so the flanges are vertical.”

Martin said he's also heard the opinion of Karl Frank, a professor emeritus at the University of Texas in Austin.

“Dr. Frank saw two of the irregularities on the fracture that turned out to be old holes filled in with weld metal,” Martin said. “What that does is presents a discontinuity. It's a different stiffness than the steel around it. It failed at those two holes. Sometime along the line someone bolted on some huge gusset plates on this truss. This was an over designed bridge with plenty of redundancy. But there was a discontinuity in strength. At some point the fixity of the joint was reduced. It's a fracture and that is a bridge engineer's nightmare. Steel is supposed to twist and yield — like a coat hanger.”

When the fracture occurred, the load it was carrying was picked up by other beams, which is what the bridge components are designed to do. But that also caused a slight lowering of the span, DeFebo said. The bridge will have to be jacked back into place.

“There are steel platforms that will basically be used that are 80 feet tall,” DeFebo said. “It took a week to drill micropiles — the footers for the platforms. These columns do have to absorb a lot of weight. [Crews] are beginning to develop the structures themselves.”

Martin believes the fracture occurred over a short period of time. Had crews not spotted it, the outcome could have been disastrous.

“The worst-case scenario without a doubt is a catastrophic failure of the section, a complete failure of the bridge,” DeFebo said. “That's one of the reasons both sides took immediate steps to close the bridge. “It's important to understand this has to be about safety. There is a lot of study and analysis that has to be done and we want to do it right. We are not talking about a small crack here, it's full fracture. It could have led to calamity.” —CEG


Lori Tobias

Lori Tobias is a journalist of more years than she cares to count, most recently as a staff writer for The Oregonian and previously as a columnist and features writer for the Rocky Mountain News. She is the author of the memoir, Storm Beat - A Journalist Reports from the Oregon Coast, and the novel Wander, winner of the Nancy Pearl Literary Award in 2017. She has freelanced for numerous publications, including The New York Times, The Denver Post, Alaska Airlines in-flight, Natural Home, Spotlight Germany, Vegetarian Times and the Miami Herald. She is an avid reader, enjoys kayaking, traveling and exploring the Oregon Coast where she lives with her husband Chan and rescue pups, Gus and Lily.


Read more from Lori Tobias here.





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