Current:Home > InvestSurpassing:Why did Francis Scott Key bridge collapse so catastrophically? It didn't stand a chance. -Excel Wealth Summit
Surpassing:Why did Francis Scott Key bridge collapse so catastrophically? It didn't stand a chance.
Surpassing Quant Think Tank Center View
Date:2025-04-09 20:39:05
The SurpassingFrancis Scott Key Bridge stood little chance: When the loaded container ship Dali destroyed one of the bridge's main support columns, the entire structure was doomed to fail.
"Any bridge would have been in serious danger from a collision like this," said Nii Attoh-Okine, professor and chair of civil and environmental engineering at the University of Maryland.
Bridges work by transferring the load they carry ‒ cars, trucks or trains ‒ through their support beams onto columns or piles sunk deep into the ground.
But they also depend on those support columns to hold them up.
When the 984-foot Singapore-flagged Dali took out that column, the bridge was inevitably going to fall, said Benjamin W. Schafer, a civil engineering professor at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore.
“You go frame by frame in the video and you can see the support removed, and then as you watch, the entire structure comes down," he said. “Literally the whole bridge comes down as a rigid body.”
Opened in 1977, the bridge was 1.6 miles long and was the world's third-longest continuous-truss bridge span, carrying about 31,000 vehicles a day.
Similarly designed bridges have a long history of catastrophic failure, but those failures more typically come from a problem within the bridge itself.
Though modern bridges are typically designed so a small failure in one area doesn’t "propagate" to the entire bridge, steel-truss structures are particularly at risk. One study found that more than 500 steel-truss bridges in the United States collapsed between 1989 and 2000.
Truss-style bridges are recognizable by the triangular bracing that gives them strength. They are often used to carry cars, trucks and trains across rivers or canyons.
Similar bridges have been weakened by repeated heavy truck or train traffic, according to experts. But in this case, the bridge's design and construction probably played little role in the collapse, Attoh-Okine and Schafer said.
“This is an incredibly efficient structure, and there’s no evidence of a crucial flaw," Schafer said. “If that had been a highway bridge, you would have watched one concrete beam (fall), but in this case, it's dramatic, like a whole pile of spaghetti."
The bigger question, the two experts said, is the long-term impact the collapse will have on shipping and vehicle traffic all along the East Coast. Although there are tunnels serving the area, they are typically off-limits to gasoline tankers and other hazardous-materials carriers, which would require significant rerouting.
Additionally, Baltimore is the nation's 20th-busiest port, according to the federal Bureau of Transportation Statistics. Workers there imported and exported more than 840,000 cars and light trucks last year, making it the busiest auto port in the nation, according to the governor's office.
"It's going to change the whole traffic pattern around the East Coast, as a cascading effect," Attoh-Okine said.
veryGood! (6594)
Related
- Rylee Arnold Shares a Long
- Prince William’s Adorable Photos With His Kids May Take the Crown This Father’s Day
- Trump sues Bob Woodward for releasing audio of their interviews without permission
- From a Raft in the Grand Canyon, the West’s Shifting Water Woes Come Into View
- Military service academies see drop in reported sexual assaults after alarming surge
- Biden, G7 leaders announce joint declaration of support for Ukraine at NATO summit
- Jan. 6 defendant accused of carrying firearms into Obama's D.C. neighborhood to be jailed pending trial
- Tom Cruise's stunts in Mission: Impossible — Dead Reckoning Part One presented new challenges, director says
- Appeals court scraps Nasdaq boardroom diversity rules in latest DEI setback
- Warming Trends: Music For Sinking Cities, Pollinators Need Room to Spawn and Equal Footing for ‘Rough Fish’
Ranking
- Trump's 'stop
- Tom Cruise's stunts in Mission: Impossible — Dead Reckoning Part One presented new challenges, director says
- Can bots discriminate? It's a big question as companies use AI for hiring
- The First Native American Cabinet Secretary Visits the Land of Her Ancestors and Sees Firsthand the Obstacles to Compromise
- New Mexico governor seeks funding to recycle fracking water, expand preschool, treat mental health
- UN Report: Despite Falling Energy Demand, Governments Set on Increasing Fossil Fuel Production
- Ditch Drying Matte Formulas and Get $108 Worth of Estée Lauder 12-Hour Lipsticks for $46
- Covid-19 Shutdowns Were Just a Blip in the Upward Trajectory of Global Greenhouse Gas Emissions
Recommendation
What do we know about the mysterious drones reported flying over New Jersey?
Read Jennifer Garner's Rare Public Shout-Out to Ex Ben Affleck
Celebrity Makeup Artists Reveal the Only Lipstick Hacks You'll Ever Need
Ecuador’s High Court Affirms Constitutional Protections for the Rights of Nature in a Landmark Decision
At site of suspected mass killings, Syrians recall horrors, hope for answers
Lands Grabs and Other Destructive Environmental Practices in Cambodia Test the International Criminal Court
Appeals court clears the way for more lawsuits over Johnson's Baby Powder
With COVID lockdowns lifted, China says it's back in business. But it's not so easy