This
photo provided by DroneBase shows
the collapsed pedestrian bridge at
Florida International University in
the Miami area on Thursday, March
15, 2018. (DroneBase via AP)
Fallen
bridge:
Toll up
to 6
dead as
officials
seek
answers
By
ADRIANA
GOMEZ
LICON
APNews.com
MIAMI -
Six
people
were
killed
and 10
others
hospitalized
in the
collapse
of a
pedestrian
bridge
under
construction
at
Florida
International
University,
police
said
Friday
as state
and
federal
investigators
worked
to
determine
how and
why the
five-day-old
span
failed.
“This
has
turned
into
from a
rescue
to a
recovery
operation,”
Miami-Dade
Police
Det.
Alvaro
Zabaleta
said.
First
responders
had been
racing
to find
survivors
in the
rubble
using
high-tech
listening
devices,
trained
sniffing
dogs and
search
cameras.
“We
have to
remove
some of
this
piece by
piece.
It’s
very
unstable,”
Miami-Dade
County
Fire
Chief
Dave
Downey
said
hours
earlier.
The
$14.2
million
pedestrian
bridge
was
supposed
to open
in 2019
as a
safe way
to cross
a busy
road
between
the
university
campus
and the
community
of
Sweetwater,
where
many
students
live.
Florida
Gov.
Rick
Scott
and U.S.
Sen.
Marco
Rubio
joined
other
authorities
at the
scene.
Rubio
said the
public
and the
families
of the
dead and
injured
deserve
to know
“what
went
wrong.”
Scott
added an
investigation
will get
to the
bottom
of “why
this
happened
and what
happened,”
and that
if
anyone
did
anything
wrong,
“we will
hold
them
accountable.”
Det.
Juan
Llera
rushed
to the
scene of
the
collapsed
bridge
in Miami
Thursday,
and
administered
CPR to a
victim
keeping
him
alive to
be taken
to the
hospital.
Officials
confirmed
4 dead
and 9
injured
after a
pedestrian
bridge
crumbled.
(March
15)
National
Transportation
Safety
Board
chairman
Robert
Sumwalt
III said
a team
of
specialists
would
begin
its
investigation
Friday
morning.
Rubio,
who is
an
adjunct
professor
at the
school,
noted
the
pedestrian
bridge
was
intended
to be an
innovative
and
“one-of-a-kind
engineering
design.”
Renderings
showed a
tall,
off-center
tower
with
supporting
cables
attached
to the
walkway.
When the
bridge
collapsed,
the main
tower
had not
yet been
installed,
and it
was
unclear
what
builders
were
using as
temporary
supports.
An
accelerated
construction
method
was
supposed
to
reduce
risks to
workers
and
pedestrians
and
minimize
traffic
disruption,
the
university
said.
The
school
has long
been
interested
in this
kind of
bridge
design;
in 2010,
it
opened
an
Accelerated
Bridge
Construction
Center
to
“provide
the
transportation
industry
with the
tools
needed
to
effectively
and
economically
utilize
the
principles
of ABC
to
enhance
mobility
and
safety,
and
produce
safe,
environmentally
friendly,
long-lasting
bridges.”
The
project
was a
collaboration
between
MCM
Construction,
a
Miami-based
contractor,
and Figg
Bridge
Design,
based in
Tallahassee.
Figg is
responsible
for the
iconic
Sunshine
Skyway
Bridge
across
Tampa
Bay.
Figg’s
statement
Thursday
said the
company
was
“stunned”
by the
collapse
and
would
cooperate
with
investigations.
“In
our
40-year
history,
nothing
like
this has
ever
happened
before,”
the
statement
said.
“Our
entire
team
mourns
the loss
of life
and
injuries
associated
with
this
devastating
tragedy,
and our
prayers
go out
to all
involved.”
MCM
Construction
Management
promised
on its
Facebook
page to
participate
in “a
full
investigation
to
determine
exactly
what
went
wrong.”
Robert
Bea, a
professor
of
engineering
and
construction
management
at the
University
of
California,
Berkeley,
said it
was too
early to
know
exactly
what
happened,
but the
decision
to use
what the
bridge
builders
called
an
“innovative
installation”
over a
heavily
traveled
thoroughfare
was
risky.
“Innovations
take a
design
firm
into an
area
where
they
don’t
have
applicable
experience,
and then
we have
another
unexpected
failure
on our
hands,”
Bea said
after
reviewing
the
bridge’s
design
and
photos
of the
collapse.
The
FIU
community,
along
with
Sweetwater
and
county
officials,
held a
“bridge
watch
party”
March
10.
That’s
when the
span was
lifted
from its
temporary
supports,
rotated
90
degrees
across
an
eight-lane
thoroughfare
and
lowered
into its
permanent
position
over the
busy
road.
FIU
President
Mark
Rosenberg
said
tests
were
being
done on
Thursday.
Authorities
said two
construction
workers
were on
the
bridge
when it
collapsed;
it’s
unclear
what the
tests
were or
if they
contributed
to the
failure.
“This
bridge
was
about
goodness,
not
sadness,”
Rosenberg
said.
“Now
we’re
feeling
immense
sadness,
uncontrollable
sadness.
And our
hearts
go out
to all
those
affected,
their
friends
and
their
families.
We’re
committed
to
assist
in all
efforts
necessary,
and our
hope is
that
this
sadness
can
galvanize
the
entire
community
to stay
the
course,
a course
of
goodness,
of hope,
of
opportunity.”