Skip to main content

Moveable barrier cuts costs, aids motorists

Work on an award-winning US bridge was completed with savings and benefits to motorists through the help of an innovative barrier. The bridge replacement of US 31 over I-465 and Lick Creek in southern Indianapolis, state capital of Indiana, won the 2011 Honor Award from the American Council of Engineering Companies of Indiana. Stephen J. Christian & Associates of Indianapolis completed the design in less than nine months to allow Indiana Department of Transportation (INDOT) to take advantage of the favourab
February 20, 2012 Read time: 3 mins
The QuickChange Moveable Barrier from Barrier Systems

Work on an award-winning US bridge was completed with savings and benefits to motorists through the help of an innovative barrier.

The bridge replacement of US 31 over I-465 and Lick Creek in southern Indianapolis, state capital of Indiana, won the 2011 Honor Award from the 2853 American Council of Engineering Companies of Indiana.

Stephen J. Christian & Associates of Indianapolis completed the design in less than nine months to allow 2855 Indiana Department of Transportation (INDOT) to take advantage of the favourable bid conditions.

The work, completed late last year, called for replacement of the superstructure for the existing seven-span bridge. A new steel beam superstructure was selected in order to minimise the dead loads and utilise the existing substructure units.

US 31 is a busy urban arterial that carries over 54,000 vehicles per day, and it was apparent that the construction project would significantly impact traffic and cause major delays.

Lick Creek Bridge carries six lanes of traffic, with two through lanes in each direction and a ramp lane in both the northbound and southbound direction.

It was determined that the bridge was too narrow to maintain the current traffic flow during construction, and the original construction plans called for a temporary widening of the bridge that inflated the cost of construction to an estimated US$6 million.

Because US 31 has a directional traffic flow with a significantly higher volume in the northbound lanes during the morning peak and higher southbound volume in the evening peak, the concept of a moveable barrier was introduced.

The QuickChange Moveable Barrier (QMB) from 165 Barrier Systems, would physically separate the northbound and southbound traffic, but it could be quickly reconfigured several times per day to provide two lanes for peak traffic in each direction using a total of only three lanes in a 2/1, 2/2 configuration.

Because the bridge no longer had to be widened, the estimated project cost was revised to $4.8 million, a saving of $1.2 million over the original estimate.

"In addition to the cost savings, the moveable barrier provided benefits to motorists by maintaining the same number of traffic lanes throughout the entire project, and the surrounding neighborhoods benefited from the reduced impact to air quality that is typically created from traffic backups," says Barrier Systems.

"The project exceeded INDOT's original expectations in several categories including overall project cost and potential impact on the motoring public."

Related Content

  • Bridge design using flow modelling techniques
    February 17, 2012
    SBG has set numerous engineering precedents with its hugely innovative Jamarat Bridge project in Saudi Arabia
  • Meva’s Mammut 350 formwork makes the difference for Neckar viaduct
    April 19, 2018
    Formwork specialist Meva is helping replace the longest motorway bridge, the Neckar River viaduct in Germany’s south-west state Baden-Wuerttemberg Work on the 1.3km Neckar viaduct, part of the A6 motorway at Heilbronn, should be finished by 2022. It is part of the A6 expansion project between the Weinberger junction and Wiesloch/Rauenberg. The project is officially the new Neckar viaduct BAB 6 at Heilbronn. Federal Motorway 6, the A6, is also known as the BAB 6. The 477km motorway starts at the French b
  • Innovative, flexible bridge formwork systems
    February 14, 2012
    Innovative formwork systems have been used to construct a variety of bridge structures. Patrick Smith reports. As part of the work on Germany's new A4 autobahn near Eisenach, the contracting joint venture awarded the formwork contract for two of the three viaducts to Doka. What makes this assignment so special to the company is that although the two steel composite bridges each have very different cross-sections, the JV is using the same overslung composite forming carriage to pour the carriageway slabs of
  • EastLink tollway a winner at the 9th ITS Australia National Awards
    June 4, 2019
    The Freeway Tunnel Ventilation On-Demand System for Melbourne’s EastLink project picked up the top Industry Award category at the recent 9th ITS Australia National Awards Traditional tunnel ventilation systems are inefficient. Fans operate at fixed speed in manual mode or with individual fans programmed to switch on and off at preset times to ensure zero portal emissions with all emissions dispersed via ventilation stacks. EastLink’s new ventilation on demand – VoD - system matches variable speed fan