Inspections
of westbound span (right) found deteriorated concrete
on deck's underside. (Photo courtesy of Maryland Transportation
Authority)
Inspections have
found deteriorating concrete on the underside of the deck
of one of the Chesapeake Bay Bridge's two parallel spans,
Maryland Dept. of Transportation Secretary Robert L. Flanagan
says. The department said on Dec. 22 that full-depth replacement
of deck sections may be necessary. Flanagan said the bridge
is safe for vehicles. "Our experts have confirmed that
the closely spaced grid of steel rebar that makes up the backbone
of the bridge is in good condition," he said.
The inspection was requested by
a outside review panel that Flanagan established this fall
to investigate another problem from a resurfacing project
on the 4.3-mile-long westbound span. In the spring, inspectors
saw widespread cracking in some sections of the bridge's deck.
The department says the new, micro silica concrete overlay
didn't bond properly to the substrata and delamination occurred.
It says that analysis so far hasn't indicated any connection
between the overlay problem and the deck underside's deterioration.
Officials will develop a plan to
fix the deck underside concrete after electronic testing is
done to see if the problem exists in other sections of the
bridge. Regarding the cost of a repair plan, Jack Cahalan,
a Maryland DOT spokesman, says, "Until they determine
the scope of the deterioration and where it's located and
develop a work plan, there is no way to develop a cost estimate
as of yet." He says the results of the scan of the deck
are expected in March.
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Cahalan says that so far, the deterioration
appears to be isolated to the sections toward the middle of
the bridge, where the deck is 6.5 inches thick. Inspections
also have been done on the underside of the 7-inch-thick decks
nearer both shores, but to date have not seen deterioration
in those sections, he adds.
The inspections, the most recent
of which took place during the Dec. 17-19 weekend, involved
cutting several six-foot-square sections of the steel form.
Previous surface inspections didn't detect the problem. Cahalan
declined to describe the nature of the concrete deterioration
that had been found.
The Bay Bridge Overview Panel,
chaired by former Transportation Research Board Executive
Director Thomas B. Deen, is expected to issue its report on
the overlay problem in January, Cahalan says.
The original $7-million resurfacing
was part of a $76-million, two-phase redecking of the westbound
span. The three-lane westbound span was opened to traffic
in 1973. Its two-lane sibling span was built 20 years earlier.