Main Street Bridge (Columbus)
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This article or section contains information about a bridge currently under construction. It may contain information of a speculative nature, and the content may change dramatically and frequently as construction progresses or new information becomes available. |
Main Street Bridge | |
---|---|
Official name | Main Street Bridge |
Carries | three general purpose lanes, one pedestrian |
Crosses | Scioto River |
Locale | Columbus, Ohio |
Maintained by | Ohio Department of Transportation |
Design | inclined arch |
Longest span | 400 feet (122 m) |
Total length | 700 feet (215 m) |
Width | ~65 feet (20 m) |
Beginning date of construction | 2006 |
Completion date | June 2009 |
The Main Street Bridge in Columbus, Ohio is a 700 foot (215 m), three-span, inclined arch suspension bridge currently under construction over the Scioto River. When completed in June 2009 the bridge will be the first in North America and only the fifth in the world to use an inclined arch superstructure. Additionally, the bridge is believed to be the first in the world to use cables and struts to tie the arch together, and the first to carry both pedestrians and vehicles. The final cost is estimated to reach $44.1 million USD.[1][2][3]
Contents |
[edit] History
The original Main Street bridge was a multiple-span, art-deco open-spandrel concrete deck arch bridge, built in 1937. After years of degradation due to weather and traffic, the bridge was deemed unfit for use and closed in 2000.[2]
Wanting an iconic structure to replace the old bridge, the city of Columbus contracted Dr. Spiro Pollalis, professor of design technology and management at the Harvard University Graduate School of Design to design the bridge. His design, altered slightly for budget reasons, is the bridge currently under construction.[2]
[edit] Design
[edit] Arch
The original concept design of the Main Street bridge was far more complicated and costly than the final design. Initially, the bridge called for a very shallow 10:1 span-to-rise ratio for the main arch, creating significant axial and bending forces. To accommodate the excess forces, the design called for expensive, high-strength concrete and steel to support the bridge. Because of the high cost of materials and construction of such a span, the design of the arch was revised to a 6.6:1 span-to-rise ratio, making the main arch taller as well as shortening it from 480 feet to 400 feet (146 to 122 meter). This design change is expected to allow for cheaper materials and save over 60,000 pounds of steel while keeping the 10 degree incline that will make it so unique.[4]
[edit] Bridge deck
The bridge deck is composed of two separate decks, a 35 foot (10.7 m) wide vehicular deck carrying three lanes of eastbound traffic, and a 18 foot (5.5 m) wide pedestrian deck elevated above the vehicular deck. While the redesign of the original concept altered the deck supports, the actual construction of the decks was only changed slightly to accommodate the new design.[2][4]
[edit] L-struts
The Main Street bridge also calls for thirteen l-struts, which will attach the arch to the bridge deck. Their original design used tapering geometries which changed depending on the strut, creating thirteen distinct struts that needed to be designed and tested separately. This made the struts very costly, and designers had to simplify the design to fit within budget. The l-struts on the current design are more uniform steel members, which will cost much less to construct. While the aesthetics of the original design have changed, the new l-struts are supposed to be similarly appealing. The redesign is also expected to save over 400,000 pounds of steel from the struts.[4]
[edit] Piers
The final redesign of the Main street bridge was of the piers. Originally, the design called for two 'V-piers', formed by the convergence of the main arch and the secondary arches on either side. This design proved to be nearly impossible to make structurally sound, and engineers had to simplify the piers. To do so they created a 'crescent pier' shape, which removes the two smaller arches on either end and creates a larger pier to provide better support.[4]
[edit] References
- ^ Ferenchik, Mark. "Eyesore will become soaring arch", The Columbus Dispatch, 2006-07-19, pp. Metro and State B1. Retrieved on 2007-11-13. (English)
- ^ a b c d Main Street Bridge. Franklin County (2006). Retrieved on 2007-11-13.
- ^ Construction Management Division Active in Ohio. Dick Corporation (2003). Retrieved on 2007-11-13.
- ^ a b c d The Main Street Replacement Bridge. Genesis Structures, Inc. (2005). Retrieved on 2007-11-13.