517-432-8220 ncpp@egr.msu.edu

Kentucky, Indiana DOTs Slide Half Mile Bridge into Place, Re-Open to Traffic One Week Later

AASHTO Journal, 25 April 2014 Last week, officials from Kentucky and Indiana joined to re-open a half-mile bridge just one week after sliding the entire bridge laterally into place over the Ohio River, the longest bridge in North America to do so. The $103 million Milton-Madison Bridge, which was slid 55 feet from temporary supports onto its new piers…

Read More

Nation’s Bridges Depend on Transportation Investment, Highway Trust Fund Certainty, ARTBA Says

AASHTO Journal, 25 April 2014 Just in time for summer construction season and only months from a looming Highway Trust Fund insolvency issue, the American Road & Transportation Builders Association this week released data that show the health of bridges across the nation depend on HTF funds to remain in operation for the public. ARTBA analyzed data released by…

Read More

Determination of Brace Forces Caused by Construction Loads and Wind Loads During Bridge Construction

The Florida Department of Transportation has released a report that explores procedures for determining bracing forces during bridge construction and examines wind load coefficients (drag, torque, and lift) for common bridge girder shapes with stay-in-place (SIP) form work and overhang form work in place. The report also includes recommended global (system) pressure coefficients (e.g., for strength design of substructures)….

Read More

Calibration of AASHTO LRFD Concrete Bridge Design Specifications for Serviceability

TRB’s National Cooperative Highway Research Program (NCHRP) Web-Only Document 201: Calibration of AASHTO LRFD Concrete Bridge Design Specifications for Serviceability explores calibrating the service limit states related to concrete bridges in the American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials’ Load Resistance Factor Design Bridge Design Specifications (AASHTO LRFD). A limit state is defined as the boundary between acceptable…

Read More

Investigation of Corrosion and Other Deterioration Effects in Highway Bridge Components Using Nondestructive Testing Technology of Acoustic Emission

The Eastern Seaboard Inter-modal Transportation Applications Center at Hampton University has released a report that explains how acoustic emission monitoring can be used to assess corrosion and other deterioration in highway bridges so as to perform maintenance, rehabilitation, and repair. Read the Report

Read More

Tennessee DOT Celebrates Milestone in Bridge Project

AASHTO Journal, 28 March 2014 Tennessee Department of Transportation officials last week were on hand to celebrate the opening of a bridge that will more easily connect two communities after years of planning. TDOT last weekend opened the new $29.5 million SR 109 bridge, allowing one lane in each direction to carry vehicles across the span, which connects the…

Read More

Nondestructive Measurements Using Mechanical Waves in Reinforced Concrete Structures

This study evaluated various techniques that use mechanical waves for the evaluation of critical concrete properties, such as proper consolidation of the concrete during placement and strength development; changes in modulus; and the detection  of cracks, voids, and delaminated regions. The methods evaluated were ultrasonic shear-wave tomography, ultrasonic pulse  velocity, crosshole sonic logging, sonic echo-impulse response, spectral analysis of surface…

Read More

Ohio River Bridges Project to Infuse $87 Billion into Local Economy, Create 15,000 Jobs, Report Says

AASHTO Journal, 21 March 2014 A report released this week by the Indiana Department of Transportation shows that a major bridge project, constructed in partnership with the Kentucky Transportation Cabinet, will not only better connect the two areas and provide greater mobility, but also infuse $87 billion into the local economy and add 15,000 jobs to the area. The…

Read More

Washington State DOT Working to Get SR 99 Tunneling Machine Moving

AASHTO Journal, 14 February 2014 Officials at the Washington State Department of Transportation updated the public this week on its progress in getting the tunneling machine beneath downtown Seattle back to work. The world’s largest boring machine, which had been tasked with creating the new SR 99 tunnel underneath Seattle as part of the Alaskan Way Viaduct Replacement Program,…

Read More

New York State DOT Finishes Last Bridge in Accelerated Bridge Program; Touts Program’s Success

AASHTO Journal, 14 February 2014 New York State Department of Transportation officials joined Gov. Andrew Cuomo last week to announce that the agency had concluded work on all bridges included in the accelerated bridge improvement program, NY Works. The $212 million NY Works program was created in the 2012-2013 state budget to “address bridge deck and structural replacement or…

Read More

Illinois, Missouri DOTs Join to Open Bridge to Reduce Congestion, Improve Safety

AASHTO Journal, 14 February 2014 Officials from the Missouri Department of Transportation, the Illinois Department of Transportation, and federal transportation officials recently celebrated the opening of a bridge that reduces congestion, provides a faster route for commuters, and allows for greater safety. IDOT and MoDOT opened the Stan Musial Veterans Memorial Bridge on I-70 in St. Louis to traffic…

Read More

Long-Term Bridge Performance Committee Letter Report: January 27, 2014

On January 27, 2014, TRB’s Long-Term Bridge Performance (LTBP) Committee sent its fourth letter report to Victor Mendez, administrator of the Federal Highway Administration (FHWA). The committee provides advice and assistance on the conduct of the LTBP program, which is designed to collect research-quality data on a large representative sample of in-service U.S. highway bridges and to analyze these…

Read More

Bridges for Service Life Beyond 100 Years: Service Limit State Design

TRB’s second Strategic Highway Research Program (SHRP 2) Reliability Project R19B has released a prepublication, non-edited version of a report titled Bridges for Service Life beyond 100 Years: Service Limit State Design that explores design codes critical for bridges to reach a service live of beyond 100 years. The report also addresses performance measures and design procedures that utilize…

Read More

Texas & Louisiana Team Up on Bridge Safety Project

AASHTO Journal, 17 January 2014 Officials from the Texas Department of Transportation and the Louisiana Department of Transportation and Development joined forces this week to break ground on a bridge replacement project that will enhance safety on a vital connection between the two states. The two state transportation departments have begun are replacing the U.S. 84 Sabine River Bridge,…

Read More

Standard Practice for Washing and Cleaning Concrete Bridge Decks and Substructure Bridge Seats Including Bridge Bearings and Expansion Joints to Prevent Structural Deterioration

The Washington State Department of Transportation has released a report that examines the perceived costs and benefits of routine washing of both steel and concrete bridges, with an emphasis on substructure seats and bridge decks. Read the Report

Read More

Rhode Island DOT Wins Award for Bridge Design

AASHTO Journal, 10 January 2014 The Rhode Island Department of Transportation recently took home an award for the design of its Pawtucket River Bridge, completed last September. RIDOT received the Honor Award from the Rhode Island Chapter of the American Institute of Architects for the design of the bridge. One of the organization’s most prestigious awards, the Honor Award…

Read More

VIDEO: Around-the-clock repairs could mean Leo Frigo Bridge reopens this month

Better Roads, 6 January 2014 Tina Grady Barbaccia (Photo: WisDOT) The Leo Frigo Memorial Bridge has been closed since Sept. 25 after motorists reported a 2-foot dip in the pavement across all lanes of traffic east of the river, according to a report in the Post Crescent. Now, around-the-clock repair efforts keep the Green Bay, Wis., bridge on track…

Read More

Questions?

Contact us for more information.