Skip to main content

Successful explosive demolition of old bridge in US state of Missouri

A successful explosive demolition has been carried out of the Hurricane Deck Bridge in the US state of Missouri. The Hurricane Deck Bridge carried Missouri Route 5 over Lake of the Ozarks and measured 695m long. The structure was no longer able to cope with the traffic volumes it was carrying and the Missouri Department of Transport (MODOT) opted to build a new delta frame bridge to replace it. Work started on the new bridge in 2012 and this was opened to traffic in September 2013. The steel span Hurricane
December 16, 2013 Read time: 2 mins
A successful explosive demolition has been carried out of the Hurricane Deck Bridge in the US state of Missouri. The Hurricane Deck Bridge carried Missouri Route 5 over Lake of the Ozarks and measured 695m long. The structure was no longer able to cope with the traffic volumes it was carrying and the 2699 Missouri Department of Transportation (MODOT) opted to build a new delta frame bridge to replace it. Work started on the new bridge in 2012 and this was opened to traffic in September 2013. The steel span Hurricane Deck Bridge opened to traffic originally in 1936, with work having started in 1934. At the time of its completion it won an award from the American Institute of Steel Construction as the most beautiful steel structure built in the US in 1936. The Hurricane Deck Bridge featured a similar design to that of the I-35W Bridge in Minnesota, which collapsed causing fatalities in 2007. Although the Hurricane Deck Bridge was designed with a longer central span it carried markedly less traffic than the I-35W Bridge however and did not suffer the same structural issues. It derived its name from the upper deck of a river vessel.

Read more on the new structure %$Linker: 2 External <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-16"?><dictionary /> 0 0 0 oLinkExternal here Visit: www.modot.org/central./major_projects/camden.htm false http://www.modot.org/central./major_projects/camden.htm false false%>

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Systra, Kiewit and Hatch to build third bridge in Kingston, Canada
    August 31, 2018
    Kingston, Canada, has selected Systra International Bridge Technologies, Peter Kiewit Sons and Hatch as the preferred consortium for the design and build Third Crossing project. Seven international teams answered the requests for proposals in February and 2018 with Systra, Kiewit and Hatch eventually chosen from a shortlist of three groups. The consortium will use an integrated project delivery model for the two-lane 1.2km bridge with a pedestrian and cycle path over the Cataraqui River will connect
  • HxGN Live 2014: Hexagon CEO highlights individual need to grasp IT innovation
    June 4, 2014
    Hexagon president and CEO Ola Rollén stressed how individual users of exciting information technology innovation held the key to successfully confronting growing global challenges during his keynote speech titled ‘The Disruptive Power of Transformation’ which officially opened HxGN Live 2014.
  • Second giant moveable scaffolding system set for Mersey Gateway
    May 4, 2016
    A second movable scaffold system (MSS) is on its way from China to the UK town of Halton, as part of the Mersey Gateway Project, a toll bridge over the Mersey River in England. The machine will be used to build the south elevated approach viaduct that will connect the main road network in the town of Runcorn to the Mersey Gateway Bridge, now under construction.
  • Turkmenistan starts construction of Ashgabat-Turkmenbashi road
    May 8, 2015
    Turkmenistan has started construction of the 544km Ashgabat-Turkmenbashi highway under a public-private partnership contract. The deal is expected to cost between US$800-900 million for every 2km or so of road construction from Ashgabat in central Turkmenistan to Turkmenbashi, a city of around 90,000 on the eastern coast of the Caspian Sea. For a YouTube video graphic representation of the highway, click here. To see World Highways report onTurkmenistan’s highways projects in 2011, click here. Türkmenb