By cramming the same
amount of stay cable steel into 35% less space, builders of
a record-breaking bridge in Vietnam can satisfy higher than
planned wind speeds without late structural changes. Developed
for the worlds longest centrally supported, concrete
cable-stayed Bai Chay Bridge, the "compact duct"
system came too late to help designers of the vast Stonecutters
crossing in Hong Kong.
To straddle Rambler Channel with
a 1,018-meter main span, Hong Kongs $350-million Stonecutters
Bridge will be wide open to typhoons. With its stays exerting
high wind forces, the designers had to specify parallel wire
cables rather than the fatter strand option, says Naeem Hussain,
a director of lead designer Ove Arup and Partners Hong Kong
Ltd.
That decision meant sacrificing
advantages of parallel strand cable, says Hussain. They include
easier strand-by-strand installation and replacement, as well
as added corrosion protection. Since then, however, stay cable
makers "have come up with new systems," he adds.
Aerodynamic.
Vietnams Bai Chay Bridge is the first to use the
slimmer cable casing design. (Photos by Peter Reina for
ENR)
Vietnams 901-m-long Bai Chay
Bridge is a pioneer of one such compact cable design, claims
Paris-based Freyssinet S.A. Under a $10.5-million subcontract
on the bridge, the company is supplying and installing centrally
located fans of 28 cables, up to 230 m long and containing
37 to 75 strands each.
With 137-m-tall towers, Bai Chay
has a 345-m cast-in-place main span. Its 3.65-m-deep deck
box is braced internally with diagonal steel tubes about 25
centimeters wide. Each 6.5-m-long deck section has two pairs
of tubes. One pair is square and prestressed at stay locations.
The other set is circular and unstressed.
A consortium of Japan Bridge &
Structure Institute Inc., Pacific Consultants International,
Transport Engineering Design Incorporation and Hyder Consulting-CDC
Ltd. completed the bridges design six years ago, says
Haruo Yanagawa, design team project manager.
But in 2004, the owner ordered
a hike in wind speed from about 45 m per sec to 50 mps. By
then, the main foundations already had been built, says Naoki
Nagamoto, a senior designer with the prime contractor, the
Shimizu-Sumitomo Mitsui Joint Operation (SSJV). "We could
not change the dimensions of the tower," says Nagamoto.
More vertical prestressing helped. But by using smaller cable
ducts, "We could reduce forces on the stays...to 80%,"
he adds.
Having already signed its cable
contract, Freyssinet moved fast to produce slimmer ducts containing
the same number of strands, says Roger Raymond, the companys
director for Vietnam. The firm slimmed 25-cm-diameter stays
by 20% and reduced 16-cm-diameter units by 10 cm, he adds.
To maximize room in the compact casings, Freyssinet trimmed
20% from the 1.5-millimeter-thick anti-corrosion strand coating.
And it even shaved off internal fillets left from welding
casing sections together.
Freyssinet also developed a slim
shuttle to thread the last 10 or so strands individually up
each tightly packed duct. For the rest, erectors use a standard
shuttle that rides a guide wire carrying two stands. "The
system was tested in [full-scale] mock-up and now we are improving
it," says Alain Granet, Freyssinet's site manager. Developing
compact ducts added about $500,000 to the cable contract,
says Raymond.
Crossing an inlet at Bai Chay near
coastal Ha Long City, the bridge will fill a gap on the 320-km
Highway 18 running east from Hanoi airport and turning north
at the coast, to Chinas border. Construction bidding
was limited to Japanese firms as the Japan Bank for International
Cooperations financing was a tied loan, says Yanagawa.
SSJV signed its design check and
construction contract for about $63 million in May 2003. Under
a roughly $10-million subcontract, Shairaishi Corp., Tokyo,
began foundation work in August 2003, completing main caissons
within a year. The 47.5-m-tall main piers are founded on pneumatic
caissons, the larger one having 20-m sides and reaching 26
m below water, says Yanagawa.
Aiming for an early completion
next September, the contractor is casting deck boxes on a
nine-day cycle. Thats good progress for Vietnam, says
Yanagawa. But the pace is leisurely for Freyssinet, says production
manager Craig Robertson.
Bai Chays last cable is due
for placing next April. After that, "I feel the compact
duct will be more and more used," says Roger. That might
be so, but not at...
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