Case History: Foundations For The New Mississippi River Bridge, St. Louis

Deep Foundations Institute
Paul J. Axtell
Organization:
Deep Foundations Institute
Pages:
13
File Size:
1113 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2011

Abstract

This case history describes the foundation design and construction for the New Mississippi River Bridge, presently under construction in St. Louis, Missouri. The 1,500 ft (457.2 m) main span of the cable-stayed bridge is supported by two delta tower pylons in the river, with anchor piers on each bank. The final foundation design was completed as a part of an Alternate Technical Concept (ATC) proposal by the winning construction team, and utilized drilled shafts up to 11.5-ft (3.5-m) diameter that were socketed into very hard limestone. As part of the ATC foundation design, a full-scale, bi-directional static load test was performed to verify the design and allow use of higher resistance values. This paper presents the results of the site exploration, construction of the load test shaft, details of the load testing, and a comparison of the test results with various design parameters.
Citation

APA: Paul J. Axtell  (2011)  Case History: Foundations For The New Mississippi River Bridge, St. Louis

MLA: Paul J. Axtell Case History: Foundations For The New Mississippi River Bridge, St. Louis. Deep Foundations Institute, 2011.

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