Micro469 wrote:Just watching the news tonight about the 40 year old bridge collaps in Minneapolis.
My heart goes out to all who lost loved ones in this tradgedy.
But it really, really burns my butt that this has happened. A bridge made of concrete and steel should by all rights last hundreds of years. I see here Greed... By the builder, the engineer, the government...both local and federal, and the inspectors who check the structure for faults.
The engineers who planned the bridge probably won the contract on the lowest bid
The people who built the bridge probably got the contract on the lowest bid.
The governing officials got the bridge built by awarding it to the lowest bidder.
In order to make a profit, the engineer probably cut corners.
In order to make a profit, the contractor probably cut corners.
In order to get the bridge built on time,(or get a kickback) the inspectors probably turned a blind eye to some discrepancies.
40 years later.... People are killed and maimed because a bridge collapses.
I sure hope that some of the contractor's family was among the victims....
(Not really, but it would be justice.)
Sorry, but something like this should never have happened. That bridge should have been shut down long before peoples lives are at risk.....
Podunkfla wrote:That is truly a disaster. It's wonderful that busload of kids was saved; but certainly awful for the many who lost their lives and their families.
40 and 50 years ago many bridges were built that were considered well engineered at the time, yet many are failing now. Even looking at the pictures, one can see it was lightly constructed for a 4 lane span. It only had one central steel arch of spanning over 400 feet. If any component of that steel truss failed the whole thing could (and did) collapse. There was no redundancy built into the structure so say the engineers. Today bridges are designed so parts of the structure can be damaged and the bridge will not fail. The scary thing is there are thousands more in similar condition. Maybe this was a terrible wake up call to the powers that be to fix these problems before another disaster happens. My heart goes out to the families that lost loved ones and the injured. I hope we learned something by this.
Sadly, considering the whole Katrina mess, I have my doubts.
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 0 guests