Skip to main content

Innovative bridge design in the US wins key industy award

The HDR-designed Marc Basnight Bridge in North Carolina recently won the Deep Foundation Institute’s Outstanding Project Award.
June 24, 2019 Read time: 2 mins
HDR-Basnight: Key industry award for North Carolina’s new bridge link

The 2418 HDR-designed Marc Basnight Bridge in North Carolina recently won the Deep Foundation Institute’s Outstanding Project Award. This recognises the innovative foundation design of the US$252 million bridge and will be given at DFI’s awards banquet on October 17th in Chicago.

The new 4.5km bridge provides a 100-year service life, resists unprecedented scour depths and minimizes environmental impacts while offering a reliable, safe passageway for residents, visitors and tourists. As the lead design firm, HDR provided all roadway, geotechnical and bridge design as well as environmental permitting services for the new bridge.

The structure provides a critical link across the Oregon Inlet — widely acknowledged as the most dangerous channel on the Atlantic Coast. Its predecessor, the Herbert C Bonner Bridge, suffered from severe scour and deterioration in the harsh marine environment, resulting in regular maintenance, repair and retrofitting by the 4027 North Carolina Department of Transportation.

“For many years, the potential scour design challenges have been known,” said geotechnical engineer Brian Keaney. “However, through a lot of hard work and our understanding of the subsurface conditions, our geotechnical team pioneered innovative pile verification methods that NCDOT and the design-builder accepted to solve this unique problem.”

An innovative bridge foundation design that used a combination of jetting and driving to install precast, prestressed concrete piles was key to project success. The foundations were designed to resist scour depths as great as 25.6m. Installing piles to the needed depths meant developing a first-of-its-kind method for calculating scour loss.

“Throughout this project, I’ve told people that the replacement of the Bonner Bridge isn’t a bridge job; it’s a complex marine foundation job with a bridge stuck on top,” said Domenic Coletti, design manager for the project. “The foundations were the key to the entire project.”

To maximise efficiency, the bridge was divided into five “regions,” with the design of each region’s foundations tailored to fit its distinctive subsurface and scour conditions, span length and height requirements, and load demands. In total, there are 690 piles measuring more than 24km in length combined.

The new bridge opened to traffic on February 25th, 2019, and provides a modern link between Bodie and Hatteras Islands.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • COWI wins Massey Tunnel design contract
    February 18, 2022
    COWI will develop an eight-lane immersed tunnel for the George Massey Crossing Project near Vancouver, Canada.
  • Parsons is handling a major interchange project in North Carolina
    June 21, 2017
    Parsons is handling the design for a major interchange project in North Carolina. The firm will carry out key elements of design for the I-26/US 74/NC 108 Interchange Project. The deal was awarded by the North Carolina Department of Transportation (NCDOT).
  • A new Indian cable-stayed bridge will improve transport connections
    March 2, 2015
    A major new cable-stayed bridge is being constructed in India - Partha Bratim Basistha reports. In India the construction of a major cable-stayed bridge is underway that will boost connections from capital Delhi to its surrounding areas. The bridge is being built in a bid to ease growing interstate traffic movement between Delhi and the surrounding North Indian states of Punjab, Uttar Pradesh, Haryana and Himachal Pradesh. Named Signature Bridge, this is a landmark structure due to its design aesthetics and
  • Mexico: underwater tunnel in Latin America
    May 8, 2015
    Mexico will benefit from an important new underwater tunnel - Mauro Nogarin writes. The city of Coatzacoalcos is located at the mouth of the river of the same name, in the Gulf of Mexico, 302km from the city of Salina Cruz, Oaxaca, in the east end of trans-isthmian corridor and at the southern end of Veracruz State. The city is seeing a key development as currently construction is 85% completed on the first immersed tube, underwater tunnel in Latin America. The reasons why experts chose this type of tunne