On a recent hot, spring
afternoon I was waiting at a Metro-North station to pick up a friend arriving
from NYC when the platform PA system made an ominous announcement:
“Due to a draw bridge failure
at Cos Cob the 4:28 train to New Haven is being held.”
Drawbridge failure? WHAT?!?
Did the bridge collapse? No, apparently
the bridge had been opened but wouldn’t close.
Sure enough, checking my phone I found an earlier text from the railroad
warned me of the bridge opening, at least. And given the high temperatures that day and
steel rails’ proclivity to expand, coupled with my knowledge of these old
bridges, I shouldn’t have been surprised.
This used to happen… a lot.
Since 2015 the railroad has
issued text warnings to commuters of upcoming bridge openings so they can plan
accordingly. Not that there are many
alternatives if the bridge closing fails, aside from the railroad being able to
say “Hey, we warned you”.
Bridge openings are controlled
by the US Coast Guard, not Metro-North.
But for the past few years Metro-North has had an agreement with the
USCG to delay bridge openings when the railroad determines it may be too hot
for them to close properly. For the most
part this has prevented incidents like the one recently at Cos Cob. And sometimes the bridges don’t close for
reasons other than just the heat. They’re
very old and replacement parts have to be hand-crafted.
Whatever the weather, Metro-North says it deploys a 15-person MOW (maintenance of way) crew at any bridge opening… just in case. They’re equipped with sledge hammers and, if the bridge closes and the tracks don’t align properly, they’re “nudged” back into place.
That’s right: 15 workers watching a bridge open and
close. Even if they’re not earning overtime
(which they do, a lot), they make good money and could be working on other,
much-needed repairs instead of watching a 100+ year old bridge, right?
To keep
the rails cool in hot weather they used to paint the bridge tops white and
even sprayed water on the tracks.
Sometimes that wouldn’t be enough.
The movable bridges between Grand
Central and New Haven don’t usually open during weekday rush hours. Most of the water-borne traffic they serve are
pleasure craft; but at the “Walk” swing-bridge in South Norwalk, there are also
barges pushed by tugboats.The "Walk" Bridge - South Norwalk
That bridge, built in 1896, is
undergoing a roughly billion dollar
rebuild (finishing in 2029) after one memorable Friday evening rush hour in
2013 when the bridge opened but would not close, just as thousands of rail
passengers were trying to get home. It
took 90
minutes to finally close the bridge, delaying both Metro-North and Amtrak
trains. The incident came just weeks
after the derailment and collision of two Metro-North trains near Fairfield and
just accentuated how old and unsafe the railroad had become.Artist Rendering of New Walk Bridge
Hopefully this won’t happen
again this summer. But on hot days, just
a heads-up to commuters: be prepared for
“bridge failures” which may interrupt your journey.
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