Title

Load Rating And Reliability Analysis Of An Aerial Guideway Structure For Condition Assessment

Keywords

Guideways; Load factors; Monitoring; Post tensioning; Prestressing; Structural reliability

Abstract

Aerial guideways are elegant transportation structures that are seen at airports, theme parks, and crowded urban areas. The guideways generally consist of continuous, prestressed concrete beam spans, precast concrete columns, and steel beam-column connections. Although there are guidelines prepared as a supplement to conventional highway and railway bridge design codes, aerial guideways form a different class, relatively less studied compared to common highway bridges. The primary objective of this paper is to present a study to better understand the structural behavior and capacity used in an existing guideway structural system which has been in service for about 35 years. The load demand on the guideway system has increased by about 50% over the years. The structural system is composed of six-span continuous prestressed concrete bridge segments. In order to develop models that bound the possible existing condition of the structure, several models are developed by changing the most critical parameters. The critical parameters are categorized as material properties, prestress losses, boundary conditions, and continuity conditions. Sensitivity studies are conducted using eight parametric models for simulations with moving loads for the two different train types. The load rating and reliability indexes are computed for all the cases under different loading conditions. The parameters that have the most influence on the load rating and reliability are also presented. The information generated from these analyses can be utilized for better-focused visual inspection and can also be used for developing a long-term structural monitoring plan. © 2009 ASCE.

Publication Date

7-28-2009

Publication Title

Journal of Bridge Engineering

Volume

14

Issue

4

Number of Pages

247-256

Document Type

Article

Personal Identifier

scopus

DOI Link

https://doi.org/10.1061/(ASCE)1084-0702(2009)14:4(247)

Socpus ID

67651068242 (Scopus)

Source API URL

https://api.elsevier.com/content/abstract/scopus_id/67651068242

This document is currently not available here.

Share

COinS