Time Running Out For Baby Boom Bridges, New Engineering Journal Editor Warns

Just as people tend to incur higher medical expenses as they get older, the cost to maintain a bridge rises significantly as it nears the end of its useful life.  So says Dr. Anil K. Agrawal, Professor of Civil Engineering in The Grove School of Engineering at T九色视频.  Professor Agrawal was recently elected editor of the 鈥淛ournal of Bridge Engineering,鈥 considered the world鈥檚 most prestigious journal in its field.

More than 50 percent of the United States鈥 600,000 bridges are aging, i.e. are more than 50 years old, he notes.  Many of these bridges were built during the Baby Boom era, between 1946 and 1964.  In the metropolitan New York area, they include the: Tappan Zee Bridge, opened in 1955; Throgs Neck Bridge, opened in 1961, and Verrazano-Narrows Bridge, opened in 1964.CCNY Professor of Civil Engineering Anil K. Agrawal on Third Avenue Bridge over the Harlem River

鈥淎s we get close to the end of a bridge鈥檚 useful life, the rehabilitation cost goes significantly higher,鈥 Professor Agrawal points out.  鈥淪ometimes it is cheaper to replace a bridge rather than rehabilitate it.鈥  That is why last year New York State officials announced they plan to replace the Tappan Zee at a cost of $6.4 billion.

鈥淏ridges are a key part of our infrastructure,鈥 continues Professor Agrawal. 鈥淭hey play a very important role in everything from emergency response and security to the smooth functioning of business and the economy.鈥  Most people take them for granted until there is a major disruption such as the collapse of the Interstate 35 Bridge over the Mississippi River in Minnesota in 2007 or the partial closure of the Throgs Neck Bridge in July due to a fire.

鈥淏ridges will continue to be a big story because we have too many old bridges and we haven鈥檛 been spending enough money to maintain the bridges built during the Baby Boom in very health condition,鈥 he added. 

鈥淭he Journal of Bridge Engineering鈥 has a special status within civil engineering because it is often a conduit for technology transfer among many stakeholders.  鈥淚n bridge engineering, you have to design for so many different scenarios and that makes the process fairly complex,鈥 he explains. 

鈥淵ou have to take into account everything from sudden changes in load factors to collisions, to explosions, to high winds and to earthquakes.  This obviously requires close collaboration among different stakeholders.鈥

鈥淭he Journal of Bridge Engineering,鈥 which is published six times a year by the American Society of Civil Engineers, is a vehicle to the bring entire bridge community 鈥 professional engineers, contractors and academics 鈥 together for technology transfer and cutting edge research, Professor Agrawal adds.

鈥淭he Journal is not purely academic.  It promotes advanced technology and research for retrofit, renewal, maintenance and management of bridge infrastructure.鈥

He is one of four professors in The Grove School鈥檚 Civil Engineering Department whose research focuses on developing new technologies to improve bridge safety.  Much of their funding comes from the New York State, New York City and New Jersey Departments of Transportation.

Among new technologies the industry is adapting is a technique known as Accelerated Bridge Construction (ABC), in which bridges are built offsite, transported to the bridge location and installed very quickly.  In New York, this was done in 2004 to  over the Harlem River.  鈥淎BC is less expensive, offers better quality control and minimizes traffic disruption,鈥 Professor Agrawal says.

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