Discussion » Statements » Rosie's Corner » Short Cut. Accelerated Bridge Construction. Instant Bridge. $14.2 million. Collapsed a few days after it opened. Isn't fast always deadly?

Short Cut. Accelerated Bridge Construction. Instant Bridge. $14.2 million. Collapsed a few days after it opened. Isn't fast always deadly?

The bridge was installed to increase student safety at Florida International University in Miami. Some  died. Some were injured. Some are trapped under the bridge. Cause is TBD.

Posted - March 16, 2018

Responses


  • 46117
    That's Republican government building at it's best.

    Very best.

    This garbage has been ruining South Florida for Decades now.

    Decades.

    There are so many abandoned shopping malls and properties, etc. down there.  The whole place seems bankrupted through graft and corruption.

    BUT STAND YOUR GROUND FOLKS.  GUNS ARE WHAT MATTER.   Save your money and use it for guns.  Save by hiring the cheapest labor and turning your backs on why the labor is so cheap. 

    Grease the palms of those in power.


    MIAMI --
    Authorities said Friday that the cables suspending a pedestrian bridge were being tightened after a "stress test" when the 950-ton concrete span collapsed over traffic, killing at least six people only days after its installation was celebrated as a technological innovation.

    As state and federal investigators worked to determine why the five-day-old span failed, Florida politicians pointed to the stress test and loosened cables as possible factors, and a police chief asked everyone not to jump to conclusions.

    "This is a tragedy that we don't want to re-occur anywhere in the United States," said Juan Perez, director of the Miami-Dade police. "We just want to find out what caused this collapse to occur and people to die."

    A Florida International University student was among the fatalities, and several construction workers were among the 10 people injured. One person died at a hospital, and Perez said five bodies were located with the help of cameras but not yet retrieved from vehicles crushed under the immense slab. No identities have been released.

    "We're not even going to talk numbers anymore because we expect to find other individuals down there," Perez said.

    Collapsed Florida International University bridge was just installed days ago
    The bridge that collapsed onto a busy Miami thoroughfare and killed multiple people below had been installed just days before the fatal accident.


    Miami-Dade Mayor Carlos Gimenez said crews had conducted a "stress test" on the span earlier in the day, and Sen. Marco Rubio tweeted that the engineering firm involved had ordered the tightening of cables that had become loosened. "They were being tightened when it collapsed," Rubio said on Twitter Thursday night.

    Experts from the National Transportation Safety Board and the Occupational Safety and Health Administration joined police in taking over command of the scene Friday from first responders, who had spent hours racing to find survivors in the rubble of the 175-foot span using high-tech listening devices, trained sniffing dogs and search cameras.

    The $14.2 million pedestrian bridge was supposed to open in 2019 as a safe way to cross six lanes of traffic between the FIU campus and the community of Sweetwater, where many students live.

    Florida Gov. Rick Scott said Thursday that investigators will get to the bottom of "why this happened and what happened," and if anyone did anything wrong, "we will hold them accountable."

    Rubio, who is an adjunct professor at the school, noted the pedestrian bridge was intended to be an innovative and "one-of-a-kind engineering design."

    When finished, the bridge would have been supported from above, with a tall, off-center tower and cables attached to the walkway. That tower had not yet been installed, and it was unclear what builders were using as temporary supports.

    An accelerated construction method was supposed to reduce risks to workers and pedestrians and minimize traffic disruption, the university said. The school has long been interested in this kind of bridge design; in 2010, it opened an Accelerated Bridge Construction Center to "provide the transportation industry with the tools needed to effectively and economically utilize the principles of ABC to enhance mobility and safety, and produce safe, environmentally friendly, long-lasting bridges."

    Robert Bea, a professor of engineering and construction management at the University of California, Berkeley, said it was too early to know exactly what happened, but he called it a risky move to use what the bridge builders called an "innovative installation" over a heavily traveled thoroughfare.

    "Innovations take a design firm into an area where they don't have applicable experience, and then we have another unexpected failure on our hands," Bea said after reviewing the bridge's design and photos of the collapse.

    The project was a collaboration between MCM Construction, a Miami-based contractor, and Figg Bridge Design, based in Tallahassee. Figg is responsible for the iconic Sunshine Skyway Bridge across Tampa Bay.

    A photo of a tweet from Dwyane Wade in regards to the FIU bridge collapse.
    Public figures react to FIU bridge collapse
    The Twitter reactions of some people in regards to the FIU bridge collapse.

    Both companies have been involved in bridge collapses before.

    FIGG was fined in 2012 after a section of a bridge it was building in Virginia crashed onto railroad tracks and injured several workers, according to a story in The Virginian-Pilot.

    MCM, meanwhile, was accused of substandard work in a lawsuit filed this month by a worker injured when a makeshift bridge MCM built at Fort Lauderdale International Airport collapsed under his weight. Another dispute resulted in a $143,000 judgment against MCM over an "arguable collapse" at a Miami-Dade bridge project.

    A review of OSHA records, meanwhile, shows MCM has been fined for 11 safety violations in the past five years totaling more than $50,000 after complaints involving its Florida work sites.

    Both companies expressed condolences for the victims and promised cooperation with investigators.

    Local The FIU community, along with Sweetwater and county officials, held a "bridge watch party" on March 10 when the span was lifted from its temporary supports, rotated 90 degrees and lowered into what was supposed to be its permanent position.

    FIU President Mark Rosenberg in a video shared on Twitter Friday that the "tragic accident of the bridge collapse stuns us, saddens us."

    "The bridge was about collaboration, about neighborliness, about doing the right thing," he said. "But today we are sad and all we can do is promise a very thorough investigation in getting to the bottom of this and mourn those who we have lost. This post was edited by WM BARR . =ABSOLUTE TRASH at March 16, 2018 11:35 AM MDT
      March 16, 2018 10:05 AM MDT
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  • 113301
    AARRGGHH! I CAHN'T STEND IT!  How many ways do we have to kill our fellow citizens? Visitors to the US? The ways are many and few depending upon "how lucky are you?". Thank you for your comprehensive reply Sharon. What's next? SIGH. Inquiring minds wanna know! :(                             
      March 16, 2018 11:39 AM MDT
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  • 10880

    Cutting corners is always dangerous.

    While construction companies claim that "instant bridges" (building them on the side then installing them fully built) are for the public's benefit (they're not holding up traffic and such) it's more than likely a way for them to save money (quicker to build).  Many customers (especially state and federal government entities) offer contractors large $$ incentives if they finish a project ahead of schedule (the earlier they finish, the more $$$ they make).  Therefore, many contractors do the best they can to get their project done quickly so that they collect these incentives (working on a project 24/7, approved worker overtime, and such).    Rushed work can mean corners are cut (with or without the contractor’s knowledge).  In the past, a few contractors have even used substandard materials in their projects or simply left out a few “minor” pieces, just so they could make a greater profit (less money spent on materials equals more profit).   Sometimes these unscrupulous methods pay off (no one notices for years); other times they have costly or even deadly consequences.

    Of course, it’s not always the contractors fault.  Sometimes it’s the design that fails (i.e. the Tacoma Narrows Bridge in 1940).  Sometimes the materials fail (nothing is made “perfectly”).  Sometimes nature plays a part (earthquake, animals/insects, weather, water and such). 

    While we may want to say that rushed work or faulty materials were the fault of the bridges collapse, until a detailed analysis is preformed on the bridge, any “conclusions” we might make are simply conjecture.   Just because a structure like this worked fine elsewhere doesn’t necessarily mean it would work where they installed it.  However, whenever a tragedy occurs we want to blame it on someone - right now (someone’s gotta pay)!  Yet no amount of knowledge (how/why it happened) or compensation (lawsuits) will ever bring back one life that was lost.

      March 16, 2018 10:38 AM MDT
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  • 113301
    Human nature. A lust after the greatest profit. That is why companies have been caught "watering down" baby juice and others have been caught "watering down" chemo drugs. In the first case the baby is gypped. In the second case the patient dies. Oh well. No one INTENDS to kill people to gain extra profit. But the sad truth is some folks are so greedy for more that is all they think about and never consider the consequences. What was is and what is shall be. Human nature being the beastly thing it is will not change..cannot change...doesn't wanna change. If they can get away with i  that's all they want. Whatever happens outside of that is not their problem. There was a move years ago with I believe Edward G. Robinson. It was called "All my Sons". I may be getting the actor and the movie confused. But the story line was that a parts manufacturer cut corners manufacturing parts for airplanes. They failed and pilots died. Fade out on the man who realizes he killed people to save a few bucks. That is the way of the world. I cannot explain why. Thank you for your reply Shuhak and Happy Friday! :) This post was edited by RosieG at March 16, 2018 12:36 PM MDT
      March 16, 2018 12:35 PM MDT
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  • 10880
    I'm not familiar with the movie.  But in today's society money is of more value than human life.  
      March 16, 2018 12:44 PM MDT
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  • 113301
    So are guns. Only in the United States of America. Only among Republicans who suck up to and kiss the a** of the NRA.  The US is not a civilized country despite what it thinks. I'm gonna ask that question. Thank you for your reply Shuhak! :) This post was edited by RosieG at March 17, 2018 2:01 AM MDT
      March 16, 2018 12:46 PM MDT
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