Skip to main content

Independent experts suggest interim Bay Bridge fix

The state Toll Bridge Program Oversight Committee (TBPOC) says it has received a report from the Federal Highway Administration (FHWA) in which the federal agency concludes that installing temporary seismic elements will make the new East Span of the San Francisco-Oakland Bay Bridge safe for traffic, and should be put in place as soon as possible. This FHWA plan involves inserting large steel plates, known as shims, into each of four bearings, improving their ability to safely distribute energy during an ea
August 15, 2013 Read time: 3 mins
The state Toll Bridge Program Oversight Committee (TBPOC) says it has received a report from the 2410 Federal Highway Administration (FHWA) in which the federal agency concludes that installing temporary seismic elements will make the new East Span of the San Francisco-Oakland Bay Bridge safe for traffic, and should be put in place as soon as possible.

This FHWA plan involves inserting large steel plates, known as shims, into each of four bearings, improving their ability to safely distribute energy during an earthquake.

The TBPOC in July asked federal highway officials to analyse the shim installation plan to assess its viability to allow the new East Span to open prior to the permanent retrofit for broken bolts on the easternmost pier of the self-anchored suspension portion of the new bridge. Federal officials recommend adopting that plan. The FHWA proposal is consistent with that of internationally known bridge designers Dr. Peter Taylor of Buckland & Taylor, in North Vancouver, British Columbia, and Dr. John Kulicki of Modjeski and Masters in Mechanicsburg, Pennsylvania, who submitted separate analyses of the shimming strategy originally advocated by the Toll Bridge Seismic Safety Peer Review Panel.

“Safety has always been the driving factor for any decision related to this lifeline bridge, and these reports confirm that the temporary fix could allow us to safely move traffic while work continues on a permanent retrofit,” said Steve Heminger, chairman of the TBPOC. “We will meet in a public session to discuss this important information and to announce the opening date for the Bay Bridge.”

At the July meeting, the TBPOC concluded its investigation into the breakage of a batch of large bolts on the eastern span of the Bay Bridge and recommended that the bridge opening be postponed from the previously announced opening on Labor Day, 2013, until further engineering work could be completed and considered.

The Toll Bridge Oversight Committee was due to hold a public meeting today (15/8) at the MetroCenter Auditorium, in Oakland, during which these reports will be discussed and the opening date for the new East Span announced.

The Toll Bridge Program Oversight Committee was created by the State Legislature in 2005 to provide project oversight and project control for the Toll Bridge Seismic Retrofit Program in California. The TBPOC is comprised of the Director of the Department of Transportation (5246 Caltrans), the Executive Director of the Bay Area Toll Authority (BATA), and the Executive Director of the California Transportation Commission (CTC). The Committee’s oversight and control activities include review and approval of contract bid documents, review and resolution of project issues, evaluation and approval of project change orders and claims, and the issuance of monthly and quarterly programme progress reports.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • ARTBA calls for more bridge repairs in US
    February 18, 2016
    The American Road & Transportation Builders Association (ARTBA) is calling for more bridge repairs in the US. There are still too many structurally deficient bridges in the US according to a recent analysis. This report states that while there were 2,574 fewer structurally deficient bridges in 2015 compared to the number in 2014, there are still 58,500 on the structurally deficient list. Worse still, at the current pace of bridge investment it will take at least 21 years before these bridges are all replace
  • Columbia kick-starts Antioquia project with Toyo tunnel financing
    January 6, 2015
    Columbia’s National Infrastructure Agency (ANI) will help finance construction of the Toyo tunnel in Antioquia. The tunnel, nearly 10km-long and costing almost US$760, will be part of a new 39km road between Santa Fe de Antioquia and Canasgordas. The central government will contribute $216 million towards the project, the regional government of Antioquia will contribute $337 million and the Medellin government will pitch in with $212 million.
  • Major bridge widening project going to plan
    April 11, 2012
    When built it was determined that a vital US road/rail bridge would always be widened. Work on that huge project is going to plan as Patrick Smith reports One of the biggest bridge widening projects in the world is being carried out under an ambitious development programme. At US$1.2 billion, the seven-year scheme to widen the Huey P. Long Bridge in the US state of Louisiana is also the largest of 16 projects planned under the state's TIMED (Transportation Infrastructure Model for Economic Development)
  • Rapid replacement of multiple bridges – the plan
    December 14, 2017
    The US State of Pennsylvania is saving itself $220 million over 10 years on a programme to replace 558 bridges with an unusual public private partnership approach - Kristina Smith writes It is called the Rapid Bridge Replacement Programme with good reason. Pennsylvania’s Department of Transport, PennDOT, wants to see no less than 558 structurally deficient bridges replaced with newly designed and constructed ones, all within four years. Using traditional forms of procurement this programme would be like