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Our Work

Mathews Bridge Emergency Repair

When a ship struck Florida’s Mathews Bridge in 2013, a critical chord in the steel structure was severed — making collapse imminent for a major thoroughfare that carries about 56,000 vehicles a day. Our team of construction professionals worked in tandem with nearly 200 other experts on this unprecedented emergency repair project for the Florida Department of Transportation.

Project Highlights

Emergency repairs included:

  • Jacking system
  • Removal and replacement of the connection plate
  • Stub beam installation
  • New lower chord member installation
  • Cheese place and gusset installation
  • Final load transfer
Client
Florida Department of Transportation (FDOT)
Location
Jacksonville, FL
Project Schedule
34 days (completed 12 days ahead of schedule)
Completion Date

October 29, 2013

Delivery Methods
Emergency Reconstruction
Project Awards
Best Project, 2014 – ENR Southeast
 
Project of the Year, 2014 – American Public Works Association (APWA)
 
American Choice Award and People’s Choice Award, 2014 – American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials (AASHTO)

Excellence in Production Work, 2014
– Florida Transportation Commission (FTC)

Outstanding Public Award , 2014
– Florida Institute of Consulting Engineers (FICE)
 
Best in Construction Partnering, 2014 – FDOT / FTBA

The Work

Work began immediately on the temporary support, with crews operating day and night on this fast-track project. We used an air winch in place of a crane due to equipment and weight restrictions on the bridge. Once the strongback, Dywidag bars, saddles, and fortresses were systematically put in place, we performed bar stressing as the system was incrementally post-tensioned, with pauses to check the geometry of the bridge.

After we raised preassembled scaffolding into place and secured from below the bridge, we began permanent repairs. We removed the sheared bottom chord in three-foot increments via the air winch. We lowered members, a guest plate, and a lateral brace onto our barge. Sections of existing steel were repaired through the use of heat-straightening before installation of new steel. Ingenuity led us to remove existing fill plates — an extremely challenging task due to proximity of the impact — and then split the replacement chords into sections for easier installation. A new sub beam, bolting, and a new cheese plate and outside gusset plate, which required installation without removal of the old one, secured the substantial repair work.

The Results

The job’s many risks and challenges made precision work and close collaboration necessary to ensure safety for all involved. With no textbook example for guidance, the collective team successfully repaired the Mathews Bridge, allowing FDOT to reopen the bridge 12 days ahead of schedule. Today the bridge continues to be structurally sound and fully functional.