Bridge Preservation Program

Report 0 Downloads 254 Views
Bridge Preservation Program

Steve Takigawa California Department of Transportation Western Bridge Preservation Partnership Meeting May 2013

1

State Bridge Inventory 12,924 Bridges 

2,500 

2,000 1,500

223 million square feet Median Age of 41 years

1,000 500

Structure Types Age in Years

95 +

80

70

60

50

40

30

20

10

0

0

Number of Bridges

3,000

  

89% Concrete 7% Steel 4% Timber

2

Changing Safety Standards

Caltrans Bridge Preservation Process Inspection Findings

Seismic Analysis Operational Improvements

Scour Analysis

All Bridge Needs

Caltrans Crew Work (Minor repair work and bridge painting)

Crew work is tracked by date of recommendation. A priority for the repair is determined by the engineer. Performance measures are used to monitor program (BLOS)

Major Maintenance (Major repairs and preventative maintenance)

SHOPP (Rehab, replacement, safety and risk mitigation)

Needs are tracked by date of recommendation

Needs split out into components based on the type of need.

Needs are minor or preventative in nature Priority for the repair is determined by engineers Performance measures are used to monitor program

Priorities are based on structural needs, economic analysis and risks using utility functions. Full project management in place. 3

Bridge Maintenance Contract Funding and Backlog

3000

2961

3,000

2,000 $94

$94

$94

$80

$94

Bridge Maintenance Program 2001 - 2005

1,500

$9

$6

$20

$6

1,000

500

$13

$40

$63

$63

$60

$-

0 01/02

02/03

03/04

04/05

05/06

Funding $

06/07 07/08 08/09 Fiscal Year

09/10

10/11

11/12

12/13

13/14

Backlog Bridges

4

# of Bridges

2922

2883

2844

2544

2320

2095

3,500

2,500

$94

$100

1645

$120

1870

$140

$6

Funding Level (Million $)

$160

3039

Projected

Actual

$94

$180

3117

4,000

3078

$200

Bridge Maintenance Contract Funding and Backlog 4,000

2991

2952

2913

2874

2647

2507

2320

3,500

3,000

2007 & 2009 Five

# of Bridges

2,500

$94

$94

$94

$94

$80

$94

2,000

$94

1870

$100

1645

$120

2095

1,500

$40

$6

$6

$6

$9

$20

01/02

02/03

03/04

04/05

$63

$63

$60

1,000

500

$13

Funding Level (Million $)

$140

2544

$160

2835

Actual

$180

3030

$200

$-

0 05/06

Funding $

06/07

07/08 08/09 Fiscal Year Backlog Bridges

09/10

10/11

11/12

12/13

13/14

Reduce Backlog

5

2005 -2012 Bridge Preservation Programs

8,623 Bridges Current - 69% Goal – 85%

Maintenance Program

300 Bridges/Yr

2,544 Bridges Current - 20% Goal 10%

40 Bridges/Yr

Preservation Program (Major Maintenance)

10,215 Bridges Current - 79% Goal – 85%

Maintenance Program

510 Bridges/Yr

2,069 Bridges Current - 16% Goal 10%

Rehab. Program (SHOPP)

22 Bridges/Yr

Preservation Program (Major Maintenance)

1,333 Bridges Current - 11% Goal – 5%

640 Bridges Current - 5% Goal – 5%

Rehab. Program (SHOPP)

6

Cabrillo Bridge Preservation

A Living Example of Preservation 7

Coronado Bay Bridge

Managed Lanes to Maximize Service Capacity of the Bridge 8

Pine Valley Creek Bridge

Built to Accommodate Future Demands

9

Summary      

Three pronged approach to bridge preservation (crews, maintenance/preservation and capital contracts) Inflow of preservation needs are increasing but new rehab needs are decreasing. Priorities of crew and preservation work is set by inspector as a timeframe for completion of work. Capital rehabilitation and replacements compete in a multi-objective utility cost benefit framework. Future functional considerations are being built into some bridges in California. Simple performance measures help decision makers understand bridge preservation needs. 10