|
|
 |
|
 |
|
Dive team to place
sensors on pier of damaged Kentucky Lake bridge
Impact from ramming by cargo vessel may have caused
pier to shift
KYTC Press
Release (photos provided by Keith Todd)
FRANKFORT, Ky. (Jan. 28, 2012) – A dive team from the
Kentucky Transportation Cabinet (KYTC) plans to place
sensors on a pier of the U.S. 68/KY 80 bridge over
Kentucky Lake to help determine how badly it was damaged
when a cargo vessel rammed the bridge Thursday night.
The crash involving the vessel Delta Mariner knocked out
a 322-foot span of the venerable bridge between Marshall
County and Land Between the Lakes National Recreation
Area in Western Kentucky. The combined-route highway,
which runs east-west, is now closed indefinitely.
At issue is the bridge pier at the eastern edge of the
impact area. “We have to know for certain whether the
pier has been shifted, and if so, whether it is still
moving,” Transportation Secretary Mike Hancock said
Saturday. “That will have a huge influence on our
decisions as we weigh the options for restoring traffic
on U.S. 68 and KY 80.”
Since the crash, KYTC inspectors have been conducting an
emergency examination of the bridge’s piers and
remaining truss spans. Those extending west of the
impact area were deemed to be stable, but inspectors on
Friday found indications that the pier on the eastern
edge of the impact area had been pulled out of position.
Next week, conditions permitting, a dive team will begin
placing sensors on the bottom of the pier. The sensors
measure degree of tilt and can detect changes if the
pier is moving. Secretary Hancock said it will take a
few weeks to collect and analyze the data.
The two-lane bridge – formally the Eggners Ferry Bridge
– opened to traffic in 1932. Its elevation was raised in
1943 when the Tennessee River was impounded to create
Kentucky Lake. A KYTC traffic count conducted in 2009
showed 2,650 vehicles per day crossed the bridge.
The Transportation Cabinet is in the process of
replacing the bridge, along with the nearby bridge over
Lake Barkley on the eastern side of Land Between the
Lakes. Preconstruction work, including geotechnical
drilling, began months ago. Gov. Steve Beshear’s
recommended highway plan, which he sent to the General
Assembly on Jan. 17, contains $165 million in
construction funding for a new Kentucky Lake bridge from
2013 through 2015.
With closure of the bridge, KYTC has posted signs to
detour traffic onto Interstate 24, which circles north
of Land Between the Lakes. Motorists also can get around
Land Between the Lakes via U.S. 62 on the northern end
and KY 121 – becoming Tennessee 119 – on the south.
|
|
|
 |
|
 |
|