Abstract

The conceptual design of bridges is a critical task with the need to assess feasible schemes, not to hinder creative work, but to avoid appealing aesthetic concepts outside feasibility constraints. Ongoing bridge failures, often during the construction of innovative designs, underscore the need to re-emphasise safety and design fundamentals when pursuing aesthetic designs. The inability to provide timely reasonable cost estimates likewise leads to later embarrassing surprises. Public confidence in the bridge engineering profession suffers. This paper is not about the numerous aids to facilitate aesthetic concept development. It attempts to promote bridge conceptual design that is amenable to control. Well-reported historic failures, focusing on pioneering bridges and novel and elegant designs, are reviewed for retrospective insight and current relevance. The repeated findings of loss of control in the design and/or construction process suggest the benefit of forward risk assessment, value engineering and constructability analysis, at concept, for both structure soundness and cost estimation, especially for major signature structures. The necessity for critical independent review is accentuated. The conceptual and aesthetic design of evolving bridges demand excellent multidisciplinary engineering capability and foresight.

Full Text
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