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Emergency repairs to snarl Bay Bridge
Paul W. Gillespie - The Capital
Engineers inspecting the Bay Bridge following this month's deadly crash found corroded steel within the concrete barriers on the eastbound span, necessitating a costly repair job and lane closures over the next several weeks.

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Annapolis

Annapolis
Published August 26, 2008
BALTIMORE - Engineers inspecting the Bay Bridge following this month's deadly crash found corroded steel within the concrete barriers on the eastbound span, necessitating a costly repair job and lane closures over the next several weeks.

That prompted officials this morning to warn holiday travelers to avoid the span this holiday weekend.

The right lane of the eastbound span will be closed for two to three weeks and the speed limit will be dropped to 40 mph while crews complete temporary repairs.

Crews will attach steel L-shaped brackets to secure the concrete walls to the deck. Guardrails also will be attached to the walls.

This is a temporary fix that will cost $3 million, state transportation officials said.

"The Bay Bridge is safe for motorists," said John Porcari, state secretary of transportation.

The closure of the right eastbound lane means that span is down to one lane. The westbound span has three lanes and can be configured to carry eastbound traffic.

But officials still advised traveling north of Baltimore and around the top of the Chesapeake Bay to reach Eastern Shore and beach destinations this weekend.

"Safety is our No. 1 priority and we are going to move ahead with this," Mr. Porcari told reporters this morning.

The jersey wall reinforcement will only be a temporary fix."These repairs we are doing are not permanent," said Geoffrey Kolberg, chief engineer.

The inspections were the result of a deadly and dramatic crash on Aug. 10 in which a truck crashed through the barrier and ended up in the bay. The driver was killed.

The corroded steel was found using "ground penetrating radar" and was not visible, officials said.

Transportation officials are trying to get a better handle on the scope of the problem and they're developing a permanent fix.

"We haven't quantified the exact amount of the corrosion," Mr. Kolberg said.

Bridge safety was thrust into the national spotlight last summer, following the collapse of the Interstate 35 Bridge in Minnesota.

Gov. Martin O'Malley's administration emphasized the need to bring more money into transportation projects, and was successful in getting new tax revenue to bolster the state's moribund transportation trust fund.

Bridge scores range from 0 to 100, and the bridge that fell in Minnesota was rated 50. Both spans of the Chesapeake Bay Bridge were rated at 65.1 in February 2007, and the Maryland Transit Authority was confident then the bridge was strong.

 

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3 months 3 days 2 hours ago
The Odds?
The odds of another tractor trailer running into the barriers at a high rate of speed are so low as to be almost incalcuable. They replaced the damaged jersey wall with a new one and added reinforcing bars down into the bridge. Problem solved, we're back to square one. The beach travel season is nearly over, and they could easily have put off these repairs until the Fall when traffic gets extremely light. This is just another example of knee jerk politics (on the part of the MTA). The bridge is no more unsafe now than it was before the truck went thru the wall. Sure, now they are aware of the damage to the steel (somehow, I think they knew before), but instead of making a decision which makes life easier for us, they knee jerk into emergency repairs. Let's be honest, the MTA is in defensive mode over the impending lawsuit that is bound to happen over this accident. This is spin control, not damage control. Thanks MTA, thanks state representives, and thanks attorney's for the MTA. We all really appreciate you looking out for our "safety".
Gideon W. - Annapolis, MD
3 months 5 days ago
Leadership
You can blame the leadership of MD for this mess ...... it's not like all the rust and corrsion happened over night, this has been many years in the works. And how can one possibly argue that the barrier in the left lane isn't safe the one in the right lane is??? If one lane of the bridge isn't safe doesn't that mean the bridge itself isn't safe? This is a nightmare for people who depend on the bridge as part of their daily routine, it's shameful it has been allowed to get to this!
Kristina P. - Easton, MD
3 months 5 days 1 hour ago
what?
I really don't like our leadership in Maryland, but, you can hardly blame them for keeping the bridge lane closed. What political motive could one have for causing a traffic nightmare? The bridge is damaged and flaws were found. Flaws to the part that keep you from driving off the side. Safety is the only reason to keep the lane closed.
Brian N. - Annapolis, MD
3 months 5 days 6 hours ago
Bridge shutdown
Bridge shutdown What is going on with Maryland's shortsighted leaders. Starting with Owemalley's ferry solution. Closing the eastbound lane for weeks on end is just plain stupid. They are removing the deck on the westbound span but keeping it open during heavy traffic periods - something that worked and guess what that plan was developed and implemented before the current leaders were annointed. There is no reason to inconvience perhaps a million motorists to give the impression a crisis exists. A driver fell asleep. Keeping the tox tests a secret from the public troubles me more. All of the extra enforcement during the day - between midnight and daybreak would be a better solution. Two way traffic is not the problem. Put speed-camera-enforcement on the bridges. End the unenforced speed limits on the bridges. The only crisis that exists is with our state leadership! Jim R. - Gambrills, MD
Jim Remines - Gambrills, MD
3 months 5 days 19 hours ago
What's the score now
So back in Feb 07 the bridge scored a 65.1. Now with this new found problem what is the score of the bridge now? Its sad that some one had to die for this problem to be found.
Mike Finazzo - Arnold, MD
3 months 6 days ago
tolls
no tolls and miss out on all those dollars? surely you gest Robert! Makes too much sense to do keep traffic moving ........
Kristina P. - Easton, MD
3 months 6 days 1 hour ago
Bay Bridge
what they need to do over the holiday weekend is to shut down the tolls... but wait! that makes too much common sense - perhaps they will do another stellar job on the repairs just like they did a few years ago when they put down the wrong kind of concrete!! we have pure bureacratic idiots running the bridge and operations... Robert G. - Grasonville, MD
Bob gast - grasonville, MD
3 months 6 days 1 hour ago
People Cry
People cry about the traffic any way... Cant please everyone.
Kimberley Mills - CHester, MD
3 months 6 days 2 hours ago
Bridge
I agree with Johnny, we need another span, but not in the current location. It makes more sense to put a span that runs from southern MD to the lower eastern shore, it would ease congestion on the bridge and on route 50. And safety won't be an issue IF people actually take 95 to route 1 and go to OC via Del, but I have faith that everyone will sit in major delays and then cry about how long they sat in traffic to get to and from OC.
Kristina P. - Easton, MD
3 months 6 days 3 hours ago
Bridge
we don't need another span. Its actually time to build the bridge from Cove Point in Calvert County, to Taylors Island in Dorchester County. They have talked about this for years, but no administration wants to use their budget. Another idea, extend the metro from New Carrolton to Kent Island. Sure, the cost is high, but the benefit is substantial.
Johnny B. - Lothian, MD
3 months 6 days 3 hours ago
Bridge
If safety is the No. 1 priority as Mr. Porcari states, why will they have two way traffic on the west bound span? It appears traffic back-ups trump safety.
R H. - Chester, MD
3 months 6 days 4 hours ago
Bridge
The time to build another span is now.
N. Wallace - Davidsonville, MD

 

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