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Investigators from
the national Transportation Safety Board were working with
New York City engineers last week to find out why a test train
derailed Sept. 27, damaging part of a newly built guideway
on the $1.9-billion Airtrain project to John F. Kennedy Airport
and killing the operator. As of Oct. 1, they were examining
the possibility that not securing blocks of concrete used
to approximate live loads within the test cars contributed
to the collision with the guideway retaining wall.
Kelvin DeBourgh Jr., 23, of Jamaica,
Queens, was an employee of Bombardier Transportation, Montreal,
part of the consortium that built and was testing the system
for the owner, the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey.
The train, traveling at an unknown speed, rounded a curve
of guideway on the airport fringe and crashed into the parapet,
tearing open the front car and shearing away 150 ft of wall.
DeBourgh was crushed.
NTSB spokesman Lauren Peduzzi says
16 concrete blocks, each 2,000 lb, had been placed laterally
within the 60-ft-long cars--eight blocks in the first car
and eight in the second. A third car was empty. The blocks
apparently were not secured and shifted as the train rounded
the curve. The role that played in the accident is still being
determined, she says.
"The port authority and all
the parties and contractors have pledged support" in
aiding the investigation, says Pasquale DiFulco, a port authority
spokesman. Testing of trains has been suspended and the accident
will affect cost and schedule of Airtrain, which had been
slated to open by year's end. The project had been on time
and on budget. "It's too early for nitty-gritty details,"
he adds.
The consortium building the project
under a design-build-operate-maintain agreement includes Slattery
Skanska, Bombardier, and Perini Corp. New York City-based
Parsons Brinckerhoff led the design effort. All firms deferred
comment to the port authority and NTSB.
Peduzzi would not comment on whether
using the concrete blocks to simulate passenger loads is a
common practice. "That will be part of the investigation,"
she says. The first car is being examined on site while the
others were taken to a railyard.
The 8.2-mile project includes the
region's first use of precast segmental construction (ENR
8/21/2000 p. 74). Columns up to 6 ft in diameter and up to
44 ft tall support track up to 50 ft high. The accident occurred
at an elevation of about half that height. The guideway, made
of 20-ton, 32-ft-wide double box segments, loops in both directions
for two miles around the terminals and splits to 3-mile legs
leading to off-airport stations.
It was unclear how many segments
topped with rail--a 14-year-old linear inducted motor technology
licensed to Bombardier--would have to be replaced. The technology
features free-rolling wheels magnetically propelled on a third
rail made of aluminum composites, allowing the automatically
driven cars to travel up to 60 mph once in service.
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