Revaluation of live load models for parking garages based on measurements, simulations, and extreme value determination

2022 ◽  
Vol 96 ◽  
pp. 102177
Author(s):  
Frank H. Kemper ◽  
Alexander Funke ◽  
Markus Feldmann
Author(s):  
Anjan Ramesh Babu ◽  
Andrzej S. Nowak ◽  
Eugene J. O’Brien
Keyword(s):  

2002 ◽  
Vol 24 (8) ◽  
pp. 1071-1084 ◽  
Author(s):  
T.J. Miao ◽  
T.H.T. Chan
Keyword(s):  

Author(s):  
Todd Ude ◽  
Y. Eddie He ◽  
Matt Chynoweth ◽  
Zaher Yousif

<p>This paper discusses the development of project-specific live load models to achieve target reliability levels for the Gordie Howe International Bridge. This new bridge between Windsor, Ontario Canada and Detroit, Michigan USA will have a main span of 853 m (2800 ft), a design life of 125 years, and will experience atypical traffic patterns as a result of customs inspection plazas required at both ends of the bridge. Due to these variations relative to standard practice, large databases of weigh-in-motion data and simulation studies were used to modify the live load models of both country’s codes following the approach of NCHRP 683. The limit states addressed extend beyond the Strength 1 (ULS 1), to include high dead-to-live ratio combinations, and fatigue limit states.</p>


Author(s):  
Amanda Pushka ◽  
Jonathan D Regehr ◽  
Aftab Mufti ◽  
Basheer Hasan Algohi ◽  
Graziano Fiorillo

Truck size and weight regulations have been a key instrument used to improve trucking productivity, safety, and operational performance in Canada. In response to these changes, bridge design codes undergo modifications to envelop the potential range of trucks in operation. A five-decade timeline is presented: (1) to document how bridge codes and their live load models have evolved, with a focus on the Manitoba-specific HSS-25 truck, and (2) to discuss how responsive bridge design codes have historically been to changes in truck size and weight regulations. While at times bridge codes are released in conjunction with expected regulation changes, there is often delay in the issuance of revised bridge design and evaluation codes. Assessments of the current truck fleet, which now includes long combination vehicles (LCVs), may be a consideration for future bridge design live load models.


Author(s):  
Francisco Javier Bonachera Martin ◽  
Robert J. Connor

Over the past decade, there has been considerable interest in the development of quantitative analytical procedures to determine if a primary steel tension member (PSTM) is a fracture critical member (FCM). Traditionally, this designation has most often been arbitrarily determined based simply on the bridge geometry, for example, the number of girders in the cross section, rather than an evaluation of the bridge in the faulted state. Clearly, such a redundancy evaluation must address the loading scenarios concurrent with failure of the PSTM, the likelihood of the member failure, the acceptable probability of load exceeding resistance in the faulted state, and the application of vehicular live load models. This research was conducted to develop a load model and load combinations that are specific to evaluating the performance of a bridge in the event a steel member was to fracture. Specifically, two load combinations were developed to evaluate the strength of a steel bridge, one for the event in which the failure of a PSTM occurs, and another for a post-failure service period. The development adhered to the reliability-based principles and procedures applied in the calculation of load combinations currently used in bridge engineering to facilitate direct implementation and to ensure consistency with current steel bridge design and evaluation procedures contained in the AASHTO LRFD Bridge Design Specifications.


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