- Construction workers have begun to dismantle the collapsed Francis Scott Key Bridge in Baltimore as they aim to reopen the port swiftly
- The bridge collapsed after a ship hit a support column with crews now working to cut and remove sections of the bridge and ultimately the containership
- Eight other bridges around the country with a similar 180 foot clearance have been identified as ‘fracture critical’ by the National Transportation Safety Board
Sparks could be seen flying off the wreckage of Baltimore’s Key Bridge on Saturday afternoon as construction workers used their tools to remove sections of the collapsed structure.
Speed is of the essence when it comes to reopening the usually busy port of Baltimore but the removal of the toppled bridge and its enormous twisted wreck is likely to take weeks.
The bodies of two of the six missing construction workers were recovered on Wednesday but the other four are thought to be trapped in the wreckage of the superstructure and may only be found as the bridge is taken apart.
The tragedy has now brought attention to other bridges around nation with many lacking the type of collision protection that could go some way to avoiding similar disasters in the future.
The Dali hit one of the bridge’s support columns at about 1:30am on Tuesday causing the bridge to immediately collapse into the Patapsco River.
The doomed men were taking a break at the time of the collapse and were sitting in their trucks to warm up just as the Dali, which was carrying some 4,700 cargo containers, smashed into the bridge.
Responders will now be looking at the damage sustained by the ship before it can be freed and removed from the scene altogether.
That process could be completed within weeks, rather than months.
Indeed, construction crews were seen working on portions of the bridge that lay closest to the vessel on Saturday.
Large pieces of the superstructure will need to be cut down using floating cranes which can then move them onto large deck barges. The pieces can then transported away and likely placed into storage for closer investigation.
The ship could then be dragged to shore or if necessary re-floated depending on how much damage the vessel sustained, and if its hull has been impacted.
While the ship is being assessed, the 22-member crew has remained on board. None were injured during the collision.
Now that the unthinkable has happened, attention has turned to eight other bridges around the nation that have been deemed vulnerable should they suffer a strike on one of their support columns similar to that of the Key Bridge.
That means that if the bridges are struck with enough force in just the right spot, a big section or the entire bridge could collapse.
On Wednesday. the Key Bridge was described as being ‘fracture critical’ by the National Transportation Safety Board.
Aside from the lack of protective structures around its supporting columns, there was also a lack of redundancy. When a pair of piers were destroyed, there was nothing there to bear the weight they had one held up.
Redundant piers may have helped, but engineers rarely design such redundancy into their construction with collisions extremely unlikely and outweighing the extra cost such a design would entail.
Tragically, that meant that the design of the bridge was ‘fracture critical,’ meaning one break took it down.
The eight others identified by the Wall Street Journal as being ‘fracture critical’ are: Tacoma Narrows Bridge, Washington; Lewis and Clark Bridge, Oregon-Washington; St. Johns Bridge, Oregon; San Francisco-Oakland Bay Bridge, California; Golden Gate Bridge, California; George Washington Bridge, New York-New Jersey; Verrazzano-Narrows Bridge, New York and Chesapeake Bay Bridge, Maryland.
In order to reduce the potential of huge ships bringing down bridges, the crossings themselves would need to be built with ‘redundancies’ around the dangers points.
The features would move objects away from vulnerable support areas on the bridge, such as the pillars and stanchions that hold it in place.
One such feature is ‘dolphins’ which are structures in the seabed or riverbed, usually made from timber or steel.
The dolphins are barriers, meant to deflect a straying ship away from a bridge’s piers.
‘Fenders’ attach to the piers to absorb a vessel’s impact. They are specially designed structures that work by deflecting some of the force should there be an impact.
Out of the eight bridges, seven of them have a similar clearance of more than 180 feet, to allow the passage of large containerships, similar to the Key Bridge, according to the National Bridge Inventory,
The eighth, the George Washington Bridge has piers that stand on land.
What makes the eight so important is because of their connection to the road networks of California, Maryland, Oregon, New York and Washington State.
But just because a bridge has been described as ‘fracture-critical’ does not mean it is unsafe – just that there is no redundancy in its load-bearing design.
It can mean that such structures come under greater scrutiny with frequent special inspections, sometimes on a yearly basis.
Of the eight bridges mentioned, many are iconic including the Golden Gate in San Francisco, the Verrazzano-Narrows Bridge in New York and the twin spans of the Chesapeake Bay Bridge.
The oldest is the Lewis and Clark Bridge linking Rainier, Oregon with Longview, Washington which opened in 1930.
The Tacoma Narrows Bridge in Washington State is the newest of the group, having only been opened in 2007.
Federal guidelines were drafted to protect bridges following the 1980 collapse of the Tampa Bay Sunshine Skyway Bridge.
It came after a freighter rammed into one of its supports.
Bridges that were build prior to the guidelines being released in 1991 did not have to comply, although some bridges were retrofitted for safety at huge cost.
The Key Bridge opened in 1977 having taken five years to build. It came down in just five seconds.
‘What we do know is a bridge like this one, completed in the 1970s, was simply not made to withstand a direct impact on a critical support pier from a vessel that weighs about 200 million pounds,,’ Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg said earlier this week.
That is not to say the Key Bridge and others like it are inherently dangerous or poorly designed.
Rather, the Key Bridge was simply never designed to withstand a direct collision from a modern-day container ship.
Emily Foster is a globe-trotting journalist based in the UK. Her articles offer readers a global perspective on international events, exploring complex geopolitical issues and providing a nuanced view of the world’s most pressing challenges.