As a young man I wanted to become a civil engineer and design the railroads of the future. So I went to one of the nation’s best engineering schools, Lehigh University, only to find out in my freshman year that I’d need calculus, physics and chemistry. So I ran quickly to the Arts College and studied sociology.
Still, my admiration of the
work of engineers in designing and running our transportation network has never
diminished. Here are a few recent examples:
CDOT & ABC:
As we rebuild our crumbling interstate highways, the CDOT deserves credit for learning its ABCs… “accelerated bridge construction”. Over two recent weekends they demolished and replaced two three-lane bridges at exit 17 in Westport with, considering the enormity of the tasks, minimal impact on traffic.
They even finished their work
early: under-promising and
over-delivering.
The speed of the work on the
$104 million project was enhanced by building the replacement bridges in
advance so they could literally slide into place after the old bridge was torn
down. Just imagine the planning, the
measuring and tight tolerances. Yet, the
first weekend project (for the northbound bridge) was finished 14 hours earlier
than planned.
A similar bridge replacement
in Stamford
on I-95 in 2019 went just as well, with more such
projects to come as Federal dollars rebuild our infrastructure.
METRO-NORTH VS MOTHER NATURE:
The same weekend CDOT was
doing its bridge work in Westport, Mother Nature was closing down rail
operations on the Hudson line near Scarborough in Westchester County. A giant landslide poured down the hill,
depositing 600 cubic yards of soil and rock on top of the railroad tracks,
affecting over a hundred Metro-North trains and dozens of Amtrak trains.
The landslide happened on a
Saturday morning, but thanks to the MTA’s engineers and construction crews, 43
hours later the tracks were reopened in time for the Monday morning commute.
An impressive effort, and not
the railroad’s first in battling Mother Nature… nor its last. But again, engineering prowess came to the
rescue.
DRONES AT SEA:
The Danish energy company
Orsted was embroiled in a labor
dispute at the State Pier in New London last week. The International Longshoremen Assoc (ILA)
claims jurisdiction over loading and unloading the vessels there which are
carrying the giant components for planned offshore wind farms.
However, thousands of miles
away in the North Sea, Orsted is testing use of giant drones to deliver
supplies to their offshore sites. The
four-engine drones have an eight and a half foot wingspan and can carry up to
150 pounds of cargo dangling below the craft.
Once carried out to sea over the construction site’s helipad, the drone
releases its cargo and heads home.
More amazing engineering, this
time with huge implications on jobs.
Drones require an operator but not a ship and expensive crew to complete
their work. If these trials work, that
could mean massive cost savings for Orsted and fewer union jobs for seamen.
So, the next time you’re
driving or taking a train, think of the engineering that went into that design. There’s a lot of smart people working very
hard behind the scenes to make your trip possible.
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