Abstract

Covered wooden bridges and the principles of heavy timber framing by which they were built represent both a significant chapter in this country’s civil engineering heritage, and a subclass of bridges that are in immediate need of repair and rehabilitation. This work often falls on the shoulders of the municipalities who own the bridges or local consulting engineering companies, neither of which have the resources to perform state-of-the-art damage assessment analyses. This study presents two case studies in which a simplified approach to damage assessment is used. The writers explore the importance of proper condition assessments, including both field observations and load tests, to the creation of viable finite-element models that practicing engineers may use in their repair and rehabilitation of these unique structures. Experimental tests were performed on two covered bridges: Morgan Bridge in Belvidere, Vermont and Pine Grove Bridge, in Oxford, Pennsylvania, and comparisons were made to finite-element ...

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