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Why Bridges Collapse | Full Documentary | NOVA | PBS
YPxVgE83lEI • 2023-11-16
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Kind: captions Language: en [Music] for more than 50 years the peva bridge stood as a landmark in the city of Genoa it was a masterpiece and everybody knows it was a masterpiece it was one of the most famous bridges in Italy the toward was the bridge of the future the bridge was really beautiful but on August 14th 2018 disaster [Music] strikes a huge 800 ft section of the bridge carrying four lanes of TR traffic collapses 27 Vehicles plummet into the valley below 43 people die it is one of the worst roadbridge collapses in Europe for more than a century and yet there was no warning why did this seemingly sound Bridge suddenly fall down and is anyone to blame in the last 10 years more than 60 Bridges have collapsed around the world how many more are about to give way in the United States over 47,000 bridges are classified as structurally deficient we have had over two dozen Bridges fail in the United States since 2000 can Engineers guarantee the safety of our aging Bridges before it is too late why Bridges collapse right now on [Music] Nova sailing a river through the heart of cities and Landscapes with Vikings brings you close to iconic landmarks local life and cultural Treasures on a river Voyage you can unpack once and travel between historic cities and Charming Villages experiencing Europe on a viking longship Viking exploring the world in Comfort learn more at viking.com [Music] Genoa one of Italy's busiest ports over 6,000 ships a year carry 54 million tons of cargo through here nearly all of it placed on trucks the trucks fan out in all directions but many end up on this highway the e80 it's a critical link between the south of France and Rome shuttling more than 70,000 cars and trucks past Genoa every [Music] day August 14th 2018 firefighter David Capello drives his SUV along Route e80 heading east towards [Music] Genoa [Music] John LCA ardini a foreman for a Furniture Company heads in the opposite direction along the e80 highway both John Luca and Dav are heading towards the pev bridge locally known as the mirandi bridge this iconic Landmark connects the two sides of Genoa at 11:36 a.m. the world in front of them begins to come apart for oh de oh de oh de [Music] oh a massive 800 foot section of the bridge carrying four lanes of traffic collapses John Luca's truck plummets [Music] 27 Vehicles fall with the bridge this is David capello's SUV it falls 100 30 ft and lands inside a cavity formed by a section of the bridge [Music] across from David's car trapped inside the remains of the collapsed Bridge Tower Rescuers make a shocking Discovery hanging inside this truck is John Luca ardini [Music] firefighters begin the precarious job of rescuing him from the mangled [Music] cab it takes 40 minutes to cut John LCA free and carry him to safety 400 firefighters from all over Italy arrive with specialized equipment most often used to rescue people from earthquakes sniffer dogs search for survivors after 4 days firefighters finally recover the last body the collapse of the pev bridge kills 43 people and injures 15 it's far and away Italy's worst Road Ridge disaster the catastrophe sounds a chilling alarm Engineers around the world want answers why was there no warning what caused the sudden collapse and most important how many other bridges are at risk the stakes are huge if the bridge failed due to age that could mean disaster for thousands of other bridges built at the same time all products of a highway construction boom that began more than a half a century ago across many countries the second world war destroyed thousands of roads and bridges in the years that followed Engineers set about rebuilding the bridges while also constructing new Superfast [Music] highways this was the dawn of the golden age of the car and nowhere more so than in the United States in 1956 President Eisenhower signed the federal aid Highway Act to create 41,000 Mi of Interstate highways as far as the eye can see in almost every city concrete and asphalt are changing the patterns of land and land use soon traffic will flow smoothly in around and between every major city and town in America today in America just as in Europe many of these concrete bridges are growing old about 2/3 of our interstate highway system Bridges were built in either the 1960s or 1970s so a number of those structures are coming to the end of what's called their useful design life the United States has more than 600,000 Road bridges over 47,000 of them are classified with the term structurally deficient what that means is that when the bridge is inspected one of the key structural elements is rated uh in poor or Worse condition so it means they're bridges that need to be repaired are these Bridges located all across America and the world ticking time bombs and particularly if they share the same faults as the pev bridge in Genoa then lives could be at stake within hours of the disaster in Italy the site becomes the focus of a major investigation Engineers need to find out what caused the bridge to collapse Camilo NTI is an independent engineer who worked on the Italian government inquiry into the disaster one should be very cautious before removing anything obviously you have to remove the debris but then be very very careful because you have to take the pieces then try to understand if there was failure somewhere if there was failure you should find those pieces broken finding those pieces is a daunting challenge sifting thousands of tons of debris investigators need to identify the Single part of the bridge that failed and triggered the disaster they move any suspect pieces to this secure Warehouse the operation will take months so at the same time they pursue a parallel line of [Music] inquiry they turn their attention to the way the bridge was built and its original design the planning of the pev bridge began in the early [Music] 1960s its designer Ricardo mirandi was a star engineer of Italy's post-war reconstruction boom his work included astonishing modern structures like this aircraft hanger in Rome and dozens of bridges he was the best bridge design engineer in Italy there is no Italian engineer who built what orandi built to construct the pev bridge in Genoa Morandi faced a huge challenge the bridge had to span the pev river multiple railway lines and four apartment buildings his plan was to build three enormous trestles each with a tower nearly 300 ft High then to hold up the road deck he would use giant supports called cable stays made of steel and concrete when complete the vast Bridge would be over half a mile long to build it mirandi used a relatively new method of construction one that he had helped develop before this time most concrete bridges used simple steel reinforcement but by stretching steel cables threaded through Hollow guides in the concrete Engineers found they could build longer spans the tension in the wires acted to compress the concrete making it less likely to Bend and crack this was called pre-stressed concrete and mirandy relied on it for the pev bridge in his design he does something radical in most cable stay Bridges the road deck is supported by many cables spread out across the span but to support his deck mirandi bunches all the cables together to create massive cable stays each one made of 52 steel cables wrapped in concrete to protect them from corrosion the technique was a novelty we put just four cables for H Pier but it were incredibly strong cables after four years Construction in 1967 Italy's president opened the bridge to an enthusiastic reception the Morandi Bridge was the most important bridge in Italy the biggest the more beautiful the most the most famous absolutely it was a Masterpiece and everybody knows it was a [Music] masterpiece but 50 years later the bridge fails catastrophically did Mandy's pioneering design play any role in causing it to [Music] collapse to find out what caused the disaster investigator need to discover which part of the bridge failed first they look for CCTV cameras in the area that would have recorded the moment the bridge collapsed rain obscures the view in almost all the cameras but in this scrapyard they find a video that captures the disaster from beginning to end the record in is part of an ongoing criminal investigation and is impounded Franchesco koty is the state's prosecutor in charge of the criminal investigation sources familiar with what happened have provided clues that allow a reconstruction of the probable sequence of the bridge collapse at just after 11:36 a.m. something happened that caused the southeast cable stay on pylon 9 to break unsupported that side of the road deck sags this unbalances the whole structure and increases the load on other components beyond their breaking points this sends the road deck plummeting to the ground and causes the giant Tower to [Music] [Applause] collapse it looked like the unthinkable had happened [Music] some of the steel cables mirandi had embedded in concrete to protect them from corroding had snapped but why the bridge had stood firm for over half a century carrying millions of Travelers so what caused it to fail the very moment it did like most Road bridges built during the building boom of the 1960s and70s the pev bridge had been experiencing steadily Rising traffic loads by 2009 it carried four times as many vehicles as 30 years earlier over 25 million Vehicles crossed it each year could the weight of traffic on the bridge have brought it down like all major bridges in Italy the pev bridge was designed to carry the load of a convoy of heavy military vehicles this meant it should have been able to carry the weight of modern traffic but a small error in design or construction can have catastrophic consequences as happened to this bridge in the United States [Music] on August 1st 2007 Kelly kayy was driving towards the i35w bridge in Minneapolis it's rush hour traffic 6:00 I'm going north and we get right on the interstate all of a sudden there's a rumbling and then all of a sudden the bridge in front of me far in front of me looks like it rose up and it almost looked like it was [Music] oscillating looking back on it I can see that we were on a point that was failing and we were starting to [Music] fall this is Kelly's Car it narrowly escaped plunging into the river I climbed onto the hood of the car and and skimmed onto this concrete Island and just looking around and seeing other people kind of getting their wits about [Music] them 111 Vehicles were on the bridge when it gave way 13 people died 145 were injured when investigators reassemble the pieces of the collapsed Bridge their attention focuses on a part known as a gusset [Music] plate gusset plates are flat plates of Steel that hold the girds of a truss Bridge together the key pieces of the i35w bridge have been preserved these pieces are all connected to the the single gusset plate that failed uh when the bridge collapsed during the collapse this folded in on itself and was completely mangled uh by the weight coming down on top of it at the time of the collapse workers were preparing to relay the road trucks had dumped piles of sand and gravel on the closed Lanes there were 800,000 lb of construction equipment on the top of the bridge as well as over 160 people uh in cars because it was the very end of rush hour that day that combined load proves too much for one of the gusset plates the gusset plate split along a line of rivets you can see that it's completely torn apart the bridge was overloaded but its designers had also made a mistake the guzet plate was uh only a half an inch thick and it should have been one inch uh so it should have been double the thickness that it that it was and that's what led to the failure [Music] did genoa's pev Bridge collapsed because of a similar fault a failure to make it strong enough to carry heavy loads when mirandi planned the bridge he designed it to support a lot of weight the ideas of Morandi was let's build a bridge with very very strong cables it was over designed very much over design so the design was incredibly safe for a time when the bridge was built the cable stays were capable of carrying over twice the weight of the vehicles on [Music] it the bridge should have been easily strong enough to carry the light traffic on it when it fell [Music] what is well known is that the total load that the bridge could support was well be beyond the loads that was on the bridge so if the weight of the vehicles on the bridge didn't cause it to collapse what did experts sources suggest that the southeast cable stay snapped near the top of the pylon if it was this cable stay that broke first something had gone seriously wrong this is the kind of fault that all Engineers fear it's known as a single point failure when one component breaks and brings down an entire Bridge it's a lesson driven home by an earlier disaster in 1928 the people of Point Pleasant in West Virginia celebrated the opening of their new bridge over the Ohio river and it was a really exciting day there was 10,000 people in town there's pictures that show the bridge is completely covered with people they were very proud of it you know to have a nice big shiny Bridge like that well it was a talk of the talk of the are in the east coast you know the Silver Bridge it was nicknamed The Silver Bridge because of its shiny coat of aluminum paint but unknown to the people that used it its design contained a serious flaw on December 15 1967 Peggy hooer was driving towards the Silver Bridge traffic was heavy it was Friday and near Christmas time I got behind a dump truck and it was moving so slow it stopped right at the light where the bridge was and I was behind it and um I had uh reached down to turn the radio dial and I heard this awful noise and when I looked up uh the bridge was just like a tinker toy waving and it just fell it just sounded like a bunch of metal it was very loud it collapsed I think 458 so it was a busy time there was 31 vehicles that there the collapse killed 46 people it Remains the worst Road Bridge disaster in American history to find out what had caused the bridge to fail investigators searched the riverbed for wreckage they brought in a whole bunch of divers and they would bring pieces up and of course they would examine all of it and see if it fit in any way the bridge was an iar suspension bridge giant bars up to 55 ft long with a hole called an i at each end were linked together with steel pins crucially each link of the suspension chain contained only two eye bars and they finally found one of the eye bars that was broken split and when they examined it they' found that there had been a a hairline fracture in [Applause] it nearly 40 Years of corrosion in the steel had triggered a fracture that ripped the eyear from its pin the weight of the bridge proves too much for the remaining eyear pulling it with an extreme force that tears the link apart the failure of this single point triggers an unexpected domino effect causing the entire bridge to collapse in the United States alone around 18,000 Bridges have been identified as fracture critical this means if one component fails part or all of the bridge would probably collapse many were built in the 1960s and70s during the rush to complete the interstate highway Network today Engineers aim to design Bridges so that if a single component fails it won't bring down the whole structure modern cable stay bridges are built with a fan of cables to spread the load this design is very different to that of morandi's pev bridge in [Music] Italy mirandi bundled all his cables together and covered them in concrete to create single giant stays his design was meant to protect the cables from corrosion but he inadvertently made the bridge vulnerable to a single point failure if just one of the huge stays broke the result would be disastrous sadly mandi's design was completed a few years before the Silver Bridge disaster luckily it has not been widely copied other Engineers realized the potential problems and only a handful of similar Bridges were ever built the pev Bridge was routinely inspected maintained and monitored for it to collapse something must have gone seriously wrong but what 4 months after the disaster workers remove the last of the debris forensic Engineers now have several key pieces of evidence their initial inspections reveal that some of the steel cables that were supposedly well protected inside the concrete covered stays have suffered from corrosion some cables appeared broken when there is corrosion the corroded cable are brittle so if you just bent them you break them which is not usual for steel but when you have corrosion this may happen very easily the investigators identify 17 key sections of the bridge for further investigation their Prime Suspect is part number 132 this is believed to be the part of the cable stay near the top of the bridge that broke they shipped the pieces to a laboratory in Switzerland where investigators will attempt to find out what caused the steel cables to corrode when mirandi covered the cables with concrete they should have been protected concrete is very alkaline the opposite of acidic this produces a thin layer of stable iron oxide around the steel and should almost completely prevent the steel from rusting thousands of bridges rely on this protection in most cases it works fine but just occasionally it goes badly wrong London the Hammer Smith fly over it's one of the city's busiest Bridges how Smith flyover is critical to the London Road Network it provides one of the main routes from Heathrow Airport into Central London and it's also one of the major routes out to West London in itself in December 2011 just months before the 2012 London Olympics Engineers discover this vital bridge is at risk of collapse the overpass was built built in the early 1960s from giant concrete sections the problem lay in the way they were held together to build the Hammersmith flyover construction Crews use a form of pre-stressed concrete made using a technique called post tensioning they hoist giant pre-fabricated sections of the bridge into position then thread 64 steel tendons through holes in the structure they then stretch and tension the wires to hold the concrete sections of the bridge [Music] together to prevent the steel cables from corroding workers cover them with a concrete grout like mirandi the engineers of the Hammersmith flyover thought the concrete would prevent the cables ever rusting but in the early 2000s inspections reveal they were wrong water is seeping into gaps in the concrete grout causing the steel tendons that held the bridge together to rust as you can see here they're all encased in grout and that means it's very difficult for the water to escape um and it's also very difficult for us to inspect the tendons and make sure that everything's okay unfortunately the concrete grout that was meant to prevent rust trapped water in cavities and hid any corrosion that did occur Transport for London calls in structural Integrity engineer John Watson to try to identify where the corrosion is worst he installed stalls over 500 microphones inside the bridge we put a microphone about every 3 m along the structure to missing out for anything that's distinct like a wire BR each of the cables buried in the concrete contains 19 separate strands of wire the cables themselves are built up of individual wires when these wires corrode a small crack grows in the wire eventually the wire snaps with a very distinct snapping sound [Music] and it's this energy this sound wave that's detected by the microphone on the structure that enables us to determine the position of the wire brake on the cable itself over the period of 3 and 1/2 years of monitoring we detected in excess of 1,100 wire brakes so typically one or two a day within a couple of months we were able to determine exactly where the hot spots were where most wire brakes were occurring this told Engineers where the corrosion was most severe allowing them to focus their inspection we were able to break out the grout around full sections of those bundles of Highly stressed steel cables to see just how deep the corrosion had penetrated those cables what they discovered was alarming the bridge was at risk of collapse although they thought the risk small to be safe they decided to close it to repair the bridge they attached four miles of new cables to the outside and stretch them just like a supersized version of the original post tensioning it's estimated that this rescue operation has extended the Bridge's Life by 60 [Music] years the close shave with the Hammersmith flyover shows how cables buried inside concrete can rust so did a similar problem with corrosion caus the pev bridge in Italy to fail in Switzerland scientists examine the pieces of the bridge brought from Genoa they need to find out what caused the steel cables that held up the bridge to corrode like the Hammersmith flyover the pev bridge relied on post tension steel cables they held the road deck together and gave the cable stays their strength back in the 1960s to construct each stay workers cover its 52 cables with steel ducts then cast the concrete around them once this sets Engineers stretch the cables to post tension the stay finally they inject a concrete grout into the ducts to cover the cables and prevent the steel from rusting when scientists examine the steel cables inside the stays they also carry out a forensic examination of the ducts in some they find cavities places where the grout is missing leaving the steel cables unprotected once moisture entered these cavities the steel wires would corrode become brittle and break investigators have not yet announced the cause of the Bridge's collapse but one theory is that corrosion of the cable stay played a major [Music] role Auto Strada the company that managed the bridge maintains that a failure of the cable stays was not the primary cause of the collapse it says that with the amount of corrosion the Zurich laboratory found the cables would still have had enough strength and would not have broken It also says the ducts were present and doing their job of containing the cement grout if the Bridge's collapse was in fact due to its poor condition could Auto Strada have detected that it was about to [Music] fail corroded steel is easy to see if it is exposed but when steel is embedded in concrete it's very hard to check that it isn't corroding concrete is very difficult to inspect non-destructively it's very difficult to detect actual wire brakes and really quantify the extensive corrosions on the pev bridge Engineers used different techniques to assess the level of corrosion of the cables inside the concrete stays one one they appear to have relied on heavily is called reflectometric impulse measurement technique or rimp for short this method aims to detect corrosion by sending short electrical pulses up the steel tendons and recording the reflected signal at the beginning everybody was very optimistic with this method in 1994 95 some technicians from autostrada published some papers where they say oh the method is fantastic you can find everything but in 1997 independent scientists conducted a study and found that rimp could not reliably detect [Music] faults part of the prosecution case is likely to question the use of the rimp method Auto strata says that since 2000 Engineers have used a new version of rimp called rimp 2 it says this is completely different and does enable experts to accurately assess corrosion and that its reliability has been verified by multiple International scientific studies rimp 2 is not widely used in the industry in 2017 autostrada submitted a detailed plan to replace the cable stays but before the work could start the bridge collapsed the p chevra bridge is one of the worst Road Bridge disasters to hit Europe in over a century it raises troubling and pressing questions about how our aging bridges are inspected and maintained the highway building boom of the 1960s and70s has left us with thousands of bridges that are growing [Music] old and we don't know how many contain hidden flaws that have yet to reveal themselves pre-stressed concrete Bridges with their concealed steel wires are now a particular concern Berlin Germany this is the elen bridge it was built in the mid 1960s in the summer of 20 2018 inspectors find a 90 ft long crack in its concrete span fearing that some of the steel cables inside the bridge have corroded and snapped they restrict traffic many aging pre-stressed concrete Bridges have similar problems some like the Hammersmith flyover can be saved by retrofitting external cables others like the elsen bridge will have to be demolished and replaced so How likely is another bridge collapse like the one in Gena you know it's hard to say How likely a collapse like that would be but we have had over two dozen Bridges fail in the United States since 2000 for various reasons so there are concerns these are bridges that we have a number of them that need to be repaired and replaced I think we have a significant challenge uh we have underinvested in our transportation system for decades but safety has a price we could probably double or triple what we're spending uh across all levels of government to really make those repairs that need to be made maintaining this aging infrastructure is a huge challenge but engineers are rising to it modern cable stay bridges are designed so that the cables can be removed and replaced one by one and Engineers have even developed a solution to one of the most challenging problems in Bridge maintenance the main cables that run between the towers on suspension bridges are extremely difficult to replace so what do engineers do if they discover that these cables are [Music] corroding Pittsburgh Pennsylvania it has been called the city of bridges as it has over 400 Richard Connors manages some of them including the city's Philip Murray Bridge well this fridge gets about 177,000 Vehicles a day it's very important this is a major physical asset in the city the bridge depends on its main cables which are over 85 years old this cable is about 13 in in total diameter it's made up of 4,864 individual wires steel wires that were installed in 1933 three this film of San Francisco's Golden Gate Bridge shows how the Pittsburgh Bridges cables would have been made individual wires were stretched across the river bundled together then wrapped inside a waterproof skin to prevent moisture seeping inside but when Engineers opened up the cables of the Pittsburgh Bridge in 2009 they found that water had gotten inside we noticed upon inspection of the main cable there was significant corrosion there was much as uh 21 to 23% loss in certain sections most of the corrosion was at the center of the bridge at the lowest point where the water would just sag to the low point to stop the corrosion Engineers first seal the cable in a new waterproof skin then they install a dehumidifier to blow dry air through the cable this should reduce the humidity inside the cables to less than 40% below this level steel won't rust the dry air travels up to the top of the main cards and then it's blown through the cable with very low pressure 1 to 2 lbs per square in and the dry air collects moisture along the way inside the cable the moisture comes out right here removing the moisture from the cables will stop them corroding and hopefully extend the life of the bridge for years to come this ingenious system prolongs the life of suspension bridges Engineers are using other techniques to help preserve structures built of pre-stressed concrete Innovative Technologies like these should enable our aging Bridges to remain safe into the future if their faults are spotted in time the sudden collapse of the bridge in Genoa is still felt in the city the loss of this vital transport link continues to cause traffic jams and delays to get the traffic moving again planners are racing to build a new bridge its designers have a big advantage over previous generations of Engineers they have had the chance to learn from earlier mistakes Bridges now are rarely built with components that are prone to single point failure regulations on designing gusset plates now require Engineers to calculate their Str [Music] strength and when building post tension Bridges greater attention is paid to ensure cavities can't form in the concrete grout we may never completely design all weaknesses out of the structures we build but every disaster is a lesson we can learn from to make Bridges safer in the [Music] future [Music] [Applause] [Music]
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