The_Cat
Senior Member
The piers were constructed around 2017, some of the earliest concrete construction. The concrete block was discovered in 2018, Is it possible that concrete contractors changed at this time?
Last edited:
I am referring to the belt fixes they referenced in the most recent video which sound like they are fairly permanent.@BASE the steel "supports", as you call them, are structural jacks designed to lift the load off of the reinforced concrete piers so that the faulty piers can be removed or upgraded. The steel jacks are only temporary.
Bridge was likely a different contractor altogether compared to the others.The piers were constructed around 2017, some of the earliest concrete construction. The concrete block was discovered in 2018, Is it possible that concrete contractors changed at this time?
The guy in the video mentioned that the final design of the piers would be discussed with city management. Maybe those steel belts can be covered with more concrete creating a more uniform looking designed pier. No way would I accept anything less. Has to look like a finished product.I am referring to the belt fixes they referenced in the most recent video which sound like they are fairly permanent.
the problem with that is that you could then no longer visually monitor the performance/status of the original pier concrete to know if your repair fix was actually repairing/fixing the original problem or just hiding it…The guy in the video mentioned that the final design of the piers would be discussed with city management. Maybe those steel belts can be covered with more concrete creating a more uniform looking designed pier. No way would I accept anything less. Has to look like a finished product.
I think this is an important point. If you took your car to get repaired, you wouldn't want them just taping over the cracked part of the bumper.The guy in the video mentioned that the final design of the piers would be discussed with city management. Maybe those steel belts can be covered with more concrete creating a more uniform looking designed pier. No way would I accept anything less. Has to look like a finished product.
I'm not sure if they will be relying on visual inspection to ensure the piers are structurally sound. It looks like they only became aware the piers weren't structurally adequate, after inspecting the surface cracks. The video above with the spokesperson described the surface cracking as minor and expected, as if they were separate issues.the problem with that is that you could then no longer visually monitor the performance/status of the original pier concrete to know if your repair fix was actually repairing/fixing the original problem or just hiding it…
I'm not saying their assertion is correct, but surface and subsurface cracking aren't necessary related, nor may result in the same outcome (service failure). It might not look pretty, but it could be okay.'Minor' - ha
View attachment 440381
What a beautiful looking remedial solution for the COE and its citizens to live with.
View attachment 440382
Reminds me of bandaid fixes on Ponte Morandi in Italy 25 years prior to its fatal collapse.the problem with that is that you could then no longer visually monitor the performance/status of the original pier concrete to know if your repair fix was actually repairing/fixing the original problem or just hiding it…
"DBRS Limited (DBRS Morningstar) downgraded the Issuer Rating of TransEd Partners General Partnership (ProjectCo) and the rating on its Series A Bonds to BB while maintaining its status as Under Review with Negative Implications"TransEd better get this right or there could be another downgrade by DBRS.