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ON
THE RIGHT FOOTING
Two diamond-shaped towers will rise 575 ft over river.
(Photo courtesy of Rob Thompson/SCDOT) |
Charleston's Cooper
River crossing is drawing on a flurry of advances in design
and construction of cable-stayed bridges from around the globe.
The project has captured the imagination of South Carolina's
largest city, and the workers building it. "We have the
greatest bridge in the world here," says a foreman standing
on one of two 6,500-cu-yd rock islands at the base of what
will be North America's longest cable-stayed span, at 1,546
ft. Above him, the legs of what will be a 575-ft-high diamond-shaped
tower rise to about half their eventual height in the sweltering
South Carolina heat.
The 2.5-mile-long, eight-lane crossing
features a major-league roster of designers and builders who
are using experience with previous cable-stayed megaprojects
to achieve an affordable bridge that is aesthetically pleasing,
strong enough for hurricanes, flexible enough for earthquakes
and high enough to allow the next generation of ships to pass
beneath.
With design just completed, the
$531-million design-build contract held by Palmetto Bridge
Constructorsa team of Tidewater/Skanska USA Inc. and
HBG Constructors Inc./Flatiron Structures Co.is halfway
through its goal of completing the project in less than four
years. To do this, work on the two approaches, two interchanges
and the main span are being done simultaneously, says Bobby
Clair, director of engineering for special projects for the
state Dept. of Transportation. "We'll have four lanes
open within 44 months," he says.
At a total cost of $644 million,
the Arthur Ravenel Jr. Bridge is easily the state's biggest
project. To get it built, SCDOT Executive Director Elizabeth
Mabry leveraged widespread support to push through an innovative
financing package, including a $325-million loan from the
state infrastructure bank, a $215-million Transportation Innovative
Finance and Infrastructure Act loan, a $20-million contribution
from the state Ports Authority and local funds. "The
bridge is more than double our annual construction program,"
notes Clair.
The Ravenel bridge will replace
two steeply graded and obsolete steel truss bridges. The two-lane,
74-year-old Grace Memorial Bridge now has a 5-ton limit and
the three-lane, 35-year-old Pearman Bridge lacks a median.
But they are the only connections between the north suburb
of Mt. Pleasant and Charleston.
A series of public meetings helped
produce the bridge's eventual design, a diamond-shaped pair
of towers supporting a cable-stayed span with a design life
of 100 years. Aesthetics were important. With limited funds,
"We took the budget for lighting, handrails, etc. and
tried to get manufacturers to rework the designs," says
Donald MacDonald, the San Francisco-based project architect.
The bridge's white and gray colors match regional historic
buildings.
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DEEP
DRILL Footings feature 11 drilled shafts up to
230 ft long through rock islands.
(Rendering courtesy of MacDonald Architects) |
Three design-build teams submitted
designs for either a pair of four-lane bridges or one eight-lane
bridge. PBC won with the lowest cost and a single eight-lane
span (ENR 6/18/01 p. 18).
Michael Abrahams, director of engineering
for New York City-based Parsons Brinckerhoff, the consortium's
design manager, says state and federal transportation officials
were concerned with the design's 131-ft width, due to its
location in a seismic and hurricane zone.
"We started a design already
developed by Buckland & Taylor for the Alex Fraser Bridge
in Vancouver," he says of the Vancouver-based designer
working as conceptual design engineer for PB. "On the
other hand, we had completed a bridge across [Boston's] Charles
River, a much wider bridge. We knew we could do this."
Man-Chung Tang, chairman of San
Francisco-based T.Y. Lin International, which with Omaha-based
HDR Inc. is construction inspector, says the design is very
similar to Korea's Seohae Grand Bridge, with almost identical
main span lengths. Abrahams also notes that a design for Bangladesh's
Paksey Bridge includes 1,800 meters of jointless high-level
approach spans, also helpful in designing the 2.5 miles of
approaches in Charleston.
Design first had to pass muster
with a panel of seismic experts, mostly from California, for
an 8.0 event, notes Eric Keen, HDR project manager. Plastic
hinge zones are being built into towers to allow needed flexibility.
France's Freyssinet designed a
damping system to ensure the structure can withstand 190-mile
hurricane wind forces. "A lot of it came from the Oresund
experience," says Lars Landen, an engineer who worked
on the Denmark-Sweden link with its 490-m-long cable-stayed
span. Because galvanized strands are unavailable in the U.S.,
each strand of the cables are coated with wax and plastic
pipe coverings to prevent corrosion, he says. There are 50
to 91 strands per cable, which are about 1 to 7 in. in diameter.
Pipe coverings for the 128 cables feature grooves that move
away moisture that might invade the cables.
With its 186-ft vertical clearance
and 1,000-ft-wide channel, the new bridge will give larger
ships heading to the Port of Charleston more room. But the
towers are protected by two sloped rock islands being built
around the footings. The base of the two islands are constructed
with 1.6 million tons of quarry stone barged from Canada.
It takes six days for the stone
to travel from Canada to the site. The stone was either loaded
into barges and dumped directly into the river or placed with
a clamshell bucket around 425 drilled shafts. The towers are
founded on the shafts, reaching to 10 ft in diameter and 230
ft deep into marl clay.
The talent pool for bridge
construction extends beyond big-name contractors and designers.
More than 60 disadvantaged citizens have been trained on site
as welders, carpenters, surveyors and operators with another
20 to come, says Clair. Candidates must complete a two-week
pre-employment process and can then work on a specific skill
under the mentoring of an instructor for the next year, says
Horrace Tobin, PBC training manager.
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Charleston Boosts
Cargo Terminals
The Port of
Charleston's cargo volume is growing 10% annually, a
figure that has port officials racing to keep ahead
of congestion at its three terminals. The Ravenel Bridge's
greater vertical clearance, a new terminal and dredging
will allow more and larger ships to put into the port.
When completed, the Ravenel
Bridge will offer higher and wider clearance for larger
cargo and container vessels, and the potential for two-way
vessel traffic. The Ports Authority Board is contributing
$45 million to the project, along with other support.
"The new bridge will be at least 186 ft in vertical
clearance," says port Director Bernard Groseclose.
The old bridges have a 150-ft vertical clearance.
Over the next three years
the port authority will invest more than $150 million
in terminal improvements. The port recently received
permit approvals for a new terminal at the now-closed
Charleston naval shipyard with 3,000 ft of berthing
space and 250 acres of container storage/support area.
The 1,500-acre base will be divided between the city
of North Charleston and the port, with the port receiving
10,000 ft of waterfront. The state asked the Army Corps
of Engineers to expedite the permitting process, says
Groseclose.
The authority now is short-listing
environmental consulting teams to perform studies and
expects to choose a team this month. Construction could
begin within a year if expedited approvals go through,
and could be completed within five to seven years. The
project will cost about $500 million.
A $150-million project
begun in 1999 to deepen Charleston's harbor is nearing
completion. It will provide the port with 47-ft-deep
shipping channels. The last major contract to deepen
the upper Cooper River is well under way.
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Says PBC project manager Wade Watson:
"We need the numbers. We need 450 craftsmen and we want
local workers." In conjunction with other federal agencies,
SCDOT this year is establishing a transportation education
institute that will offer 20 scholarships to inner-city children
for a participating technical college. Another program, just
implemented, will offer college scholarships.
Speed is based on project delivery.
If not for design-build, "we'd be just now signing the
contract with the contractor," says Abrahams. Supplies
had to be ordered on a "just-in-time" basis and
constantly renegotiated; 42 large cranes, 50 barges and two
tower cranes assigned as needed. But Watson and Clair say
there are no major claims so far, and no major injuries. PBC
would face $30,000 a day in potential penalties if late, but
expects to finish well ahead of the 60-month schedule, they
say.
Some 500 workers representing 50
subs are working 10-hour shifts in gen-eral. "Cable-stays
get the notoriety, but they're not the hardest part of this
job," says Watson. At the western end of the job, 100
metal cylinders of 30-in. pipe are set 40 ft deep to support
a 3,000-ft-long, 40-ft-wide platform to set equipment rather
than barging into a pristine salt marsh.
Approach supports have 8-ft-deep
caps, each designed specifically for a bridge segment and
rising at a 4% grade. The diamond tower forms of wood and
steel will be topped with prefabricated concrete panels that
"fit like a glove" over the sections, notes John
Young, PBC superintendent. The 26 x 30-ft, 120-ton uncoated
rebar cages are each placed and filled with 700 cu yd of concrete.
"We worked with local suppliers to come up with fly ash
in high proportions for impermeable concrete," notes
Abrahams. The mix has 40% fly ash and reaches 7,600 psi after
six days.
The tower legs are hollow, allowing
for maintenance elevators and access. Superstructure work
has now begun with erection of steel girders. The first girders
connecting the rows of pier caps are 135 ft long and 45 tons
each. When done, erection of the precast concrete deck using
the balanced cantilever method will follow. More than 130
concrete beams, each up to 85 tons and up to144 ft long, are
also being placed for an interchange on the Charleston side
of the bridge. Cable placement will begin next summer, when
the towers are completed.
After the Ravenel Bridge is completed
and ready for 50,000 daily travelers, demolition will begin
on the two old ones, says Clair. Some of the old steel may
end up as 85 acres of fishing reef from which to watch huge
ships pass under the bridge.
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Designers Are Busy
With Demand for Cable-Stayed Bridges
The cable-stayed
bridge business is busy, both in the U.S. and around
the world. "Nobody has the final answer" about
where bridge-building technology will eventually lead,
says Michael Abrahams, engineering director for New
York City-based Parsons Brinckerhoff. But there are
"tremendous improvements" that are making
cable-stayed bridges stronger, longer and slimmer, he
says.
Monostrand cabling, where
one strand from a cable can be removed for testing,
isn't new but a new cradle system designed by Tallahassee-based
Figg Engineering Group for Ohio's Maumee River bridge
"will revolutionize the design of cable-stayed
bridges for the future," claims Linda Figg, the
firm's president. "It will eliminate cable-stayed
anchors in the pylon and provides greater freedom in
design of pylon shapes."
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| Ohio
bridge will feature cable system for cables. |
Cables run between the deck
and the cradle system at the top of the pylon, allowing
access to the stay to remove a reference strand at any
point. Each strand is wrapped in its own "jacket."
The bridge is slated to open in 2006.
Boston's Charles River Bridge
pioneered an ungrouted cable system with internal dampers
to control wind vibrations and the use of iso-tensioning,
says Raymond McCabe, director of bridges for the designer,
HNTB, Kansas City. "The issue before was stressing
all strands at any one time, requiring a large and heavy
jack," he says. "That resulted in the tower
needing to be very large. Now, we're able to slim down
tower elements and facilitate stressing of cables with
lighter equipment."
In China, two very long cable-stayed
bridges now are being built. Stonecutters Bridge in
Hong Kong and the Sutong Bridge in Jiangsu Province
both will have spans more than 1,000 m long, says Man-Chung
Tang, chairman of T.Y. Lin International, San Francisco.
New techniques also are being
applied to cables in suspension bridges. New York City's
Hardesty & Hanover is applying a new analytical
model for assessing fracture toughness of deteriorated
wires on the Mid-Hudson suspension bridge in upstate
New York.
T.Y. Lin International currently
is designing San Francisco's new Bay Bridge, "by
far the longest and largest self-anchored suspension
bridge," Tang says. "It is especially remarkable
for having a single tower in an extremely high seis-mic
zone and bad soil conditions," he explains.
Elsewhere, Vancouver, B.C.-based
Buckland & Taylor is involved with several cable-stayed
bridges in Korea. In Greece, the Rion-Antirion Bridge
will be the world's longest of the genre, with five
cable-stayed spans totaling 2,250 m (ENR 1/1-1/8/01
p. 30).
Engineers in the U.S. are
effectively prohibited from using galvanized strands
because of lack of domestic capacity and "Buy American"
laws, say designers. Still, the 230-ft-wide, triple-plane
Interstate 70 bridge in St. Louis and the Desmond Bridge
in Los Angeles are two examples of projects moving forward.
"Cable-stayed bridges have sex appeal," says
Joe LoBuono, principal with Weidlinger Associates, New
York City.
The design also is being
carried to pedestrian bridges. In New York City, a four-lane,
500-ft-long, $40-million cable-stayed bridge will reconnect
153rd Street across a rail yard. And a cable-stayed
pedestrian swing bridge is being designed for San Diego.
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