Likelihood of Unplanned Bridge Posting and Closing

Federally required state department of transportation (DOT) Transportation Asset Management Plans (TAMPs) must include a process for risk management analysis. State DOTs are tasked with selecting bridges for preservation (including retrofit), repair, and replacement. These needs are seldom met with available budgets. Investment strategies result from evaluating various levels of funding to achieve targets for condition and performance effectiveness at a minimum practicable cost while managing risks. Risks include those that affect condition and performance; environmental demands, such as extreme weather events; and seismic activity. Unplanned postings and closings related to condition may result from different causes, including originally undetected deterioration affecting strength or stability, substantial change in condition since the previous inspection due to accelerated deterioration, damage from normal traffic or environmental loading on compromised members, and so forth. These situations may be more prevalent in certain bridge types and materials (e.g., timber), component or element types (e.g., truss), element defect types (e.g., corrosion), site locations (e.g., waterway), and so forth. Unplanned postings and closings are distinguished from planned because the former affects bridges that are not currently posted or restricted from carrying legal loads. Unplanned postings may also exclude bridges that are systematically posted to extend service life, not due to the exceedance of safe load capacity. To provide for meaningful comparison of bridges, the estimated annual probabilities must vary as a function of bridge condition and explanatory attributes. Key explanatory attributes are to be identified. Example attributes may include bridge type and material, elements type and material, element defect type and quantities, load rating values compared to legal load, bridge location and environment (e.g., natural and human), traffic magnitude, age, bridge size and span lengths, presence of deck joints/span continuity, or routine maintenance intensity. The data source used by state DOTs to apply the identified probability values will be readily available or acquired from system-level data [e.g., national bridge inventory (NBI) and state DOT element data]. The objective is to quantify the likelihood of unplanned bridge posting and closing as a function of bridge condition and defining attributes to facilitate describing bridge management risks from condition. The research will quantify at the bridge level in terms of annual probability values that can be applied to individual bridges.

Language

  • English

Project

  • Status: Proposed
  • Funding: $500,000.00
  • Contract Numbers:

    Project 10-154

  • Sponsor Organizations:

    National Cooperative Highway Research Program

    Transportation Research Board
    500 Fifth Street, NW
    Washington, DC  United States  20001

    American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials (AASHTO)

    444 North Capitol Street, NW
    Washington, DC  United States  20001

    Federal Highway Administration

    1200 New Jersey Avenue, SE
    Washington, DC  United States  20590
  • Project Managers:

    Abu-Hawash, Ahmad

  • Start Date: 20250526
  • Expected Completion Date: 0
  • Actual Completion Date: 0

Subject/Index Terms

Filing Info

  • Accession Number: 01956606
  • Record Type: Research project
  • Source Agency: Transportation Research Board
  • Contract Numbers: Project 10-154
  • Files: TRB, RIP
  • Created Date: May 28 2025 2:04PM