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The superstructure
lines of a newly constructed pedestrian bridge rising to 87
ft above Shoreline Drive in Long Beach, Calif., resemble the
old Cyclone Racer roller coaster, a mainstay of the old neighboring
Pike amusement park from 1930-68. But the aluminum space frames
patented co-axial joint connections look toward the future.
The CAJ moment-resisting connection
system uses no welds or bolts, says Glenn A. Reynolds, president
of Gossamer Space Frames Inc. He patented the system in 1999,
but the pedestrian bridge is the first field application.
Circular shapes offer "the
most economical, efficient, cost-effective structural members,"
Reynolds says. "But connections are where you lose the
benefit
.You have to analyze for forces as if you have
a hinge."
Reynolds calls his system "invisible,
requiring no tapering, welding or bolting. It fits together
like a Tinker Toy."
"I was pretty scared when
we took this job," says Craig Parrish, area superintendent
for Phoenix-based erector Schuff Steel Co. It wasnt
the roller coaster shape of a 450-ft-long set of twin bridges
featuring a 150-ft clear span and 30-ft-wide concrete deck,
he says. But connecting an aluminum superstructure with threaded
machined connections and tying the assemblage to a steel substructure
posed a challenge. "It wouldnt take much misalignment
at all to make the whole thing go south," he says.
The erector discarded plans to
assemble the superstructure off site and pick it with a crawler
crane or to build it in place, piece by piece. Working with
Reynolds and Gossamer bridge designer Gary Noble Curtis, Schuff
engineers conceived a modular scheme. The crew assembled matching
bridge sections of approximately 20x30 ft on the ground, connecting
them with cross-members and continuing on. A crane lifted
them into place for connection to the previously erected sections.
"It took about six weeks," says Parrish. "It
was pretty easy to assemble, once we got going. We actually
beat the schedule."
Each tension sleeve is inserted
through the end cap and screwed into a block connector, which
serves as a node in traditional space frame design (see diagram).
The end cap moves axially along the tension sleeve and is
threaded onto the tubular member in a "reach and grab"
maneuver. Finally, the compression sleeve is threaded down
over the end cap and thrust against the block connector.
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COMPOUND Co-axial connection ties bridg together.
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The process depends on "extremely
tight machine tolerances," says Michael Harness, project
manager with Snyder Langston, the Irvine, Calif.-based general
contractor for the $2.5-million structure.
The aerospace industry has spawned
an abundance of machine shops in the area, says Reynolds.
"A tolerance of .005 on an inch is impressive in a construction
environment, but in aerospace, its pretty run of the
mill," he says.
Now that Gossamer has a demonstration
model to show off, Reynolds is ready to tackle bigger projects.
The Jet Propulsion Laboratory is interested in using CAJ on
a new generation of radio telescopes. "There are a huge
number of architectural opportunitiesarenas, covered
walkways, glass walls, towers, atriums," says Reynolds.
"Aerospace could use large jigs and fixtures. Were
ready to take the next step."
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