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The three-lane Lion's
Gate Bridge spanning 1,517 m across the scenic Burrard Inlet
in Vancouver, looks slender and elegant, even serene. But
the experience of the all-star assembly of bridge engineering
firms that gathered to replace its deck, seismically upgrade
an approach and keep it sturdy for 70,000 daily commuters
was anything but serene.
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| (Photo
courtesy of American Bridge) |
"We had some of the best engineering
firms in the world working on this bridge, knowing it would
be challenging," says Geoff Freer, project director for
owner British Columbia Transportation Financing Authority.
"But even with that, challenges came that nobody anticipated."
The bulk of work has been completed
on the contract begun in April 1999. A joint venture of American
Bridge, Pittsburgh, and Surespan, Ltd., Vancouver, won the
job at a price of $58.5 million, to be completed at the end
of 2000. A six-month delay resulted from a dispute over whether
the contractor's original plan to use a unique movable truss
ramp system would work.
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| ROLLING
Clinging to bridge hangers, a traveling jacking system
lifted and lowered deck sections. (Photo courtesy of American
Bridge) |
While engineers still disagree
about that, they concur that the alternative method, a traveling
jack system with continuity links, worked well in the end.
Final paving will be completed by spring. And the final price
tag will be about $63.4 million.
Built by the Guinness family of
beer fame in 1938 with two lanes, the signature suspension
bridge, supported by 109-m-tall towers, was designed with
economy prioritized over durability, says Darryl Matson, project
engineer for owner's bridge engineer Buckland & Taylor,
Vancouver. Sold to the government in 1952, the bridge accommodated
increasing traffic that eventually far exceeded its design
capacity of 45,000 daily vehicles. Lane markings were altered
to make three narrow 3 m wide lanes and two 1.2-m wide sidewalks.
By the 1990s, the deck maintenance cost about $2 million a
year.At one point the British Columbia government considered
building a new design-build-operate-maintain crossing to be
funded by tolls, but this did not meet with public favor,
says Mike Proudfoot, director of design and construction for
the owner. The decision to rehabilitate the existing landmark
structure went forward, but the government at the time "basically
restricted the budget and put very little in the project for
contingency," says Freer.
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| TIGHT
QUARTERS Every morning, equipment had to be covered
up to allow traffic to pass. (Photo courtesy of American
Bridge) |
TOUGH START. The final decision
was to replace the concrete-filled steel grid deck with an
orthotropic one, widening it to accommodate three 3.6-m-wide
lanes and two 2.7-m-wide sidewalks while lightening the total
weight in the 473-m-long main span by 4.5%. However, the two
187-m-long side spans now are 3.1% heavier. An existing sag
of 8% in the center of the profile also has been straightened,
a causeway road widened and the old stiffening trusses on
the bottom chord replaced by two longitudinal stiffening trusses
below the deck.
Buckland & Taylor designed
a replacement plan for the deck and seismic upgrades for the
north approach in 1998, and American Bridge/Surespan won the
contract in 1999. AB has since bought Surespan's 10% interest.
Crews had 10-hour nighttime windows to work, but were expected
to have the bridge fully open to traffic by 6 a.m. "The
16 months of work were really 13 months," says Mike Cegelis,
AB spokesman.
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| Much
work was done on hangers overhead. (Photo courtesy of
American Bridge) |
Restricted scheduling was just
the beginning. "It's hard for someone who was not involved
to realize the complexity and challenges AB was faced with,"
says Michael Abrahams, project engineer with Parsons Brinckerhoff,
New York City, which performed independent checking. "This
was an old bridge, which really didn't have a lot of capacity."
Wind loads limited suspender cable capacity and live traffic
during total deck replacement made the bridge so sensitive
that "we had to take into account every piece of equipment
during lifting...even pieces of tools and number of people
standing on the jacking traveler," he says. "For
instance, you could have four men on the travelernot
five."
Movements also can cause
deformations in the bridge profile. John Clenance, project
engineer for erection engineer Steinman, New York City, now
owned by Parsons Transportation Group, uses the rubber-band
analogy to describe the potential for "jumping"
back as sections are cut out while the bridge is under tension.
Also, due to the bridge's original economics, "some of
the elements have no reserve capacitywe couldn't count
on the structure to take extra loads in many of its members,"
he adds.
Every change in the bridge
geometry was calculated and matched against the reality in
the field. "We ran a computer model through 60 years
of history,"says Clemmons. Elements such as suspender
lengths sometimes turned out differently when actually surveyed.
"The cable at the north bent had slipped 66 mm...platforms
had been removed, utilities added, new overlays" and
a multitude of other factors changed conditions.
Parsons developed software just for the bridge. "We
had to generate a complete set of calculations for each erection
stage, which had 15 steps each," says Clenance. "We
generated up to 600 megabytes of numbers for each stage....It
almost sunk our file server." Loads varied, too. "The
truss became a live load when being lowered or raised. Then,
it's a dead load when in place." Wind factors and the
hydraulics of the traveling jack system also had to be factored
in.
PLAN A. AB/S originally had intended
to use a movable truss ramp especially devised for the Lion's
Gate in its bid. "This would have allowed us to work
during the day with the equipment serving as a roadway bridge
and as an erection gantry," says Cegelis. Using the movable
truss ramp (MTR) to carry traffic as well as serving as a
lifting and lowering gantry for truss sections would have
minimized closures to less than 50 nights, he says.
AB/S, Parsons and Parsons Brinckerhoff
collaborated on the design of the MTR, but conflict arose
four months into the contract over interpretation of the contract
documents regarding loading requirements. "We interpreted
[load limits allowed on the bridge during construction] as
being for a 20-ton truck," says Ron Crockett, AB/S contractor
representative. "The client had a different opinion60-ton
trucks." With the higher allowable loads, the MTR also
would have to be heavier to carry those loads.
"It was a praiseworthy
idea," says Peter Buckland, principal in charge for Buckland
& Taylor. "But the bridge couldn't sustain the weight
of the MTR and the traffic as well."
After wrangling with possible
modifications for two months, "we realized if we were
to continue down the MTR path, it would delay erection by
one year," says Crockett. So the contractor decided to
use a jacking travelera variation on Buckland &
Taylor's gantry plan. "Our plan had been to lift big
[20-m segments] up a ramp from the park," says Buckland.
"The contractor built 10 m pieces instead, and lifted
them sideways up." Buckland says the gantry had advantages
in lateral lifts of bigger segments, but concedes, "The
jacking traveler was light...and they didn't have to build
a ramp in the park." Click
here to view diagram
AB and Parsons maintain
the MTR would have worked, particularly since the owner eventually
backed off the 60-ton truck limit. Also, some work that was
required with the MTR was done anyway with the jacking traveler,
such as adjusting suspender tensions in advance of the traveler,
notes Peter Whitlock, Parsons project manager.
Proudfoot maintains that "AB
put a lot of effort to make the MTR work, but I think everyone
recognized everything was exhausted in trying to make that
scheme perform. Going back to the original strategy was right
decision." AB's Cegelis concedes that "the owner
could have penalized us...but they recognized a honest misinterpretation
so they elected not to pursue damages. When we did change
directions we moved very quickly." There were no major
injuries on the job, on which the contractor was responsible
for quality assurance and control.
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| IN
MOTION strand jacks help support deck segments
carried by traveler, which has retractable legs for rolling
forward. (Photo courtesy of American Bridge) |
Crockett experienced plenty
of "hair-pulling" moments from the beginning. "There
were timesfor example, the very first weekendwhen
we got into all kinds of problems," he recalls. Removing
pins from the old bridge's 166 hangers was one; the rusty
pins had seized up and wouldn't come out even after being
heated. The road wasn't reopened to traffic until the following
afternoon. "It was never that bad again," Crockett
says. Crews built frames and used a 100-ton jack to push the
pins out.
Canron Construction Corp. West,
Vancouver, fabricated the new bridge sections upside down
and welded orthotropic troughs to the 16.8-m-wide deck plates.
A total of 54 sections were fabricated and barged to the site.
Work began first on the bridge's north side spans and progressing
to the main spans, with old sections lowered onto either bogeys
or barges.
The jacking traveler, a steel
frame weighing about 55 tonnes, is suspended from hangers
over the deck section to be removed and rolls forward to the
next section when each deck section has been replaced. Its
strand jacks lift the deck pieces up and down and support
the weight of the deck section while the existing hangers
are disconnected.
At one point, it temporarily filled
in for a suspender that could not be used at the end of a
shift because the suspender socket failed, says Clenance.
"One suspender couldn't be used the normal way....We
computed adjustments so that particular suspender would not
be overstressed by the jacking traveler. We were able to give
AB the information so they could open the bridge with the
jacking traveler holding the suspender to the truss."
Once the new section is hoisted
into place and aligned, temporary hanger extensions are installed
and the strand jacks released. A traffic plate bridges the
gap between old and new deck sections so that traffic can
pass. The traveler stays on the hangers during the day, then
rolls forward for the next night shift.
For wind factors and for the need
to disconnect and reconnect bridge components quickly, the
hydraulic continuity link, which holds the old and new bridge
parts together during the daytime, was vital. The continuity
link on the main span had a hydraulic system that "permitted
it to have differing stiffnesses depending on...wind forces,"
says Clenance. "It prevented higher winds from overloading
the truss." Like a giant deadbolt, the link's steel members
connect to receiving ends on the new deck.
On the bridge's south side, where
the terrain is rugged, the crews lifted the sections in half-lengths
of 10 m, turned them sideways and lowered them into place
from above. The jacking traveler on the south spans sported
a turntable device that allowed the rotation of the sections.
SHAKEUP. The north approach viaduct
also received what engineers claim is the world's first design-build
seismic retrofit. Klohn-Crippen Consultants Ltd., Vancouver,
decided on a plan to allow 24 steel bents to rock on their
concrete pedestals. "We'd been joking about taking the
nuts off the anchor bolts so the foundations could just lift
off at the base plates," says Bruce Hamersley, Klohn-Crippen
project manager. But after research was done, it became reality.
"Fifty bucks to take the nuts off, $2 million to prove
it worked, and we're done," he says facetiously. The
approximately $3-million retrofit of the steel structure is
designed for a 1-in-475-year likelihood seismic event.
The columns are rigidly connected
at the bases and founded on individual spread footings. Piles
were driven up to 120 ft deep at seven piers and connected
to the footings with concrete pile caps, where liquefaction
was a factor. Lead-core rubber bearings were installed at
the north abutment and bracing added to H-bents, where pairs
of frames are linked together. Individual footing pedestals
were tied together to prevent differential movements. At bents
where more uplift in a quake is expected, steel plates were
put in at the bases to absorb energy, and internal flanges
were added to columns.
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| SEISMIC
Bracing at bases help control movements. Photo courtesy
of American Bridge) |
Hamersley compares the rocking
concept to a wineglass. "If you hold both sides of the
glass and then try to move the top, you will break the stem.
But if you move the toe, the heel of the glass goes up and
the stem doesn't break," he says. The "wineglass"
foundations of the viaduct will move up in a quake, but not
buckle. "Once you've got enough load in the braced frame
to initiate the structure to start overturning, the quake
can't put any more loads on itit just pushes it over
more," he says. "We isolated the braces and limited
the amount of load to protect them."
There were plenty of skeptics,
but Lion's Gate engineers were convinced. "It's amazing
how well it worked out," says PB's Abrahams.
HAPPY
END. There were some 300 claims, says Freer, but at least
80% were resolved as the project continued, and the rest through
mediation. "We had a referee in place continuously [and]
it worked out reasonably well," he says. "It was
tough communication, but people kept communicating."
AB/S received a settlement of about $4.7 million.
The final cost is about $5 million more than the original
budget. Normally, "I'd be expecting contingencies of
15% and 25% for a project like this," says Freer. "If
one looks at the final numbers including claims settlements,
we came in around 16%."
All's well that ends well, say all involved. "I don't
mind the debates, as frustrating as they can be," concludes
Freer. "They were held in a warm room, not out on a cold
night on the bridge."
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