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Mianus River Bridge

Coordinates: 41°02′12″N 73°35′31″W / 41.03667°N 73.59194°W / 41.03667; -73.59194
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Mianus River Bridge
The bridge in 1977. The 1983 collapse happened in the easternmost southern section (visible right)
Coordinates41°02′12″N 73°35′31″W / 41.03667°N 73.59194°W / 41.03667; -73.59194
Carried6 lanes of I-95
CrossedMianus River
LocaleCos Cob and Riverside, Connecticut
Official nameMichael L. Morano Bridge
Maintained byConnecticut Department of Transportation
Characteristics
DesignGirder and floorbeam
Clearance below70 feet (21 m)
History
Construction start1956[citation needed]
Opened1958
Rebuilt1992
Collapsed1983
Location
Map

The Mianus River Bridge is a span that carries Interstate 95 (Connecticut Turnpike) over the Mianus River, between Cos Cob and Riverside, Connecticut. It is the second bridge on the site. The original bridge collapsed in 1983, killing three motorists. The replacement span is officially named the Michael L. Morano Bridge, after a state senator Michael L. Morano who represented Greenwich.

Collapse

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A 100-foot (30.5 m) section of the bridge's deck on its northbound span collapsed at 1:30 a.m. EDT on Tuesday, June 28, 1983. Three people were killed and three more were seriously injured when two cars and two tractor-trailers fell with the bridge into the Mianus River 70 feet (21.3 m) below.[1][2] Greenwich Police were first on scene after calls came in to GPD Dispatch Center which also notified CSP and The town's marine police and the United States Coast Guard were called while Greenwich Police blocked off the highway as National Guard came in with helicopters. An unnamed man, traveling to Atlanta that night, stopped upon spotting the crash and brought the other cars to a stop, likely preventing more falls.[3] Many residents were also woken up due to the sound of the collapse, which shook houses and was "like a clap of thunder".[4]

Casualties from the collapse were few because the disaster occurred at 1:30 a.m., when traffic was low on the often-crowded highway.[5]

Causes

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The collapse was caused by the failure of two pin and hanger assemblies that held the deck in place on the outer side of the bridge, according to an investigation by the National Transportation Safety Board.[6] Rust formed within the bearing of the pin, exerting a force on the hanger which was beyond design limits for the retaining clamps. It forced the hanger on the inside part of the expansion joint at the southeast corner off the end of the pin that was holding it, and the load was shifted to outside hanger. The extra load on the remaining hanger started a fatigue crack at a sharp corner on the pin. When it failed catastrophically, the deck was supported at just three corners. When two heavy trucks and a car entered the section, the remaining expansion joint failed, and the deck crashed into the river below.

Pin and hanger assembly used on the bridge

The ensuing NTSB investigation concluded that the collapse occurred due to ″deficiencies in the State of Connecticut's bridge safety inspection and bridge maintenance program.″[7] They cited corrosion from water buildup due to inadequate drainage as a cause. During road mending some 10 years before, the highway drains had been deliberately blocked and the crew failed to unblock them when the road work was completed.[8] Rainwater leaked down through the pin bearings, causing them to rust. The outer bearings were fracture-critical and non-redundant, a design flaw of this particular type of structure. The bearings were difficult to inspect close-up, although traces of rust could be seen near the affected bearings.

The incident was also blamed on inadequate inspection resources in the state of Connecticut. At the time of the disaster, the state had just 12 engineers, working in pairs, assigned to inspect 3,425 bridges. The collapse came despite the nationwide inspection procedures brought about by the collapse of the Silver Bridge in West Virginia in December 1967. The collapse also came as a surprise, considering the bridge underwent and allegedly passed a DOT inspection just nine months prior. After the collapse, one of the inspectors altered his notes to add 20 additional notes to appear as if he had observed the problems with the bridge. He made the additional notes with a finer pencil, and thus he was found out and due to his long record of good service, given one-year of probation rather than fired. Also, on the weekend leading up to the collapse, residents had complained about an increase in strange noises and vibrations coming from the bridge, including what one resident described as ″like thousands of birds chirping″, but no action was taken.[9]

Aftermath

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After the collapse, the almost 90,000 vehicles that used the bridge daily were diverted onto US-1 and local streets in Greenwich, causing the worst traffic problems the town had ever seen. The Town of Greenwich Health Department monitored the environmental impact, providing advice through the issuance of special bulletins to residents along the temporary routes. The interstate was not fully reopened until September, and then only with a temporary truss carrying two lanes of northbound traffic instead of the usual three. In total, final repairs cost over $20 million.

The Bridgeport & Port Jefferson Ferry, which operates out of Bridgeport roughly 25 miles east of the bridge and which had entered a new car and passenger ferry, the MV Grand Republic, into service three months prior to the collapse, saw a surge in ridership following the collapse, as many travelers traveling between Connecticut and Long Island found the ferry an attractive alternative to the traffic congestion caused by the collapse.

The Mianus River Bridge was completely reconstructed in the late 1980s and early 1990s. Work included replacing all of the structural steel, rebuilding and expanding the bridge deck to accommodate a wider roadway, and repairing the bridge piers to extend their service life. The replacement span was completed in 1992 and eliminated the pin-and-hanger assemblies that caused the collapse of the original bridge. The new wider bridge also features full left and right-hand shoulders, a feature absent from the old bridge. Many other bridges in Connecticut were also retrofitted after the collapse to prevent what happened to cause the bridge to collapse.[10]

Governor William O'Neill afterward proposed a $5.5 billion transportation spending package to pay for rehabilitation and replacement of bridges and other transportation projects in Connecticut.

In 1992, the bridge was officially named the Michael L. Morano Bridge, after a state senator who represented nearby Greenwich.[11]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "Mianus Bridge Disaster 1983". history.com. Retrieved August 31, 2012.
  2. ^ Jeffrey, Schmalz (June 24, 1984). "Year after bridge collapse, questions and pain still linger". The New York Times. Retrieved July 26, 2015.
  3. ^ "Mianus River Bridge Collapses – Today in History: June 28 - Connecticut History | a CTHumanities Project". Connecticut History. June 28, 2018. Retrieved March 13, 2023.
  4. ^ Levy, Matthys (1992). Why buildings fall down : how structures fail. Mario Salvadori. New York: W.W. Norton. ISBN 0-393-03356-2. OCLC 24468105.
  5. ^ Nguyen, Hoa (August 2, 2007). "Deadly Mianus disaster recalled". The Advocate. Stamford, Connecticut. pp. 1, A4.
  6. ^ Staff (July 19, 1984) "Collapse of a Suspended Span of Inter- state Route 95 Highway Bridge over the Mianus River" National Transportation Safety Board
  7. ^ "Mianus River Bridge". Failure Case Studies. March 21, 2017. Retrieved March 13, 2023.
  8. ^ "Mianus River Bridge Collapse". I-35W Bridge Collapse wiki. May 5, 2008.
  9. ^ kathyfoley21 (June 28, 2022). "June 28: The Mianus River Bridge Disaster on I-95". Today in Connecticut History. Retrieved March 13, 2023.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  10. ^ Cavanaugh, Jack (August 1, 1999). "The View From/Bridgeport; With Ridership Rising, Ferry Gets a New Ship". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved May 12, 2023.
  11. ^ "Issue Focus: Transportation & Tolls". Greenwich Sentinel. October 14, 2018. Retrieved May 15, 2022.

Further reading

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