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Bridge Collapse Over Mississippi River

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James

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jeez, just saw this on the news, horrible stuff, up to 6 people dead, sounds like a school bus full of kids made it off the bridge before it collapsed or something along those lines, one of those freak accidents that just make you think.

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At least six people were killed when an interstate bridge in Minneapolis, Minnesota, collapsed Wednesday evening, plunging cars and chunks of concrete into the Mississippi River below.

more photos » There were "lots" of injuries, the state Homeland Security and Emergency Management Department said.

Local hospitals put the number of people hurt at 37 so far.

The accident occurred shortly after 6 p.m. (7 p.m. ET). There were 50 to 100 cars on the bridge at the time, according to early estimates. Witnesses described a "dust cloud" as the bridge collapsed. See photos of the disaster »

Lt. Amelia Huffman of the Minneapolis Police Department told CNN affiliate KARE it was "not clear at this point what caused the collapse" of the Interstate 35W bridge near University Avenue.

"We have personnel there in the rescue effort," she said. "I have never seen anything remotely like this before."

Mark Lacroix, who lives on the 20th floor of an apartment building near the bridge, told CNN he saw the last seconds of the collapse.

"I heard this massive rumbling and shaking basically and looked out my window," Lacroix said. "It just fell right into the river." Watch Lacroix describe the collapse »

He said there had been construction work on the bridge in recent weeks.

Construction took place on the bridge Tuesday night and was to take place again Wednesday night, according to the Minnesota Department of Transportation.

The highway would have been restricted to a single lane in both directions from 8 p.m. to 5 a.m. both nights.

The bridge was undergoing redecking work, but nothing structural was being done, U.S. Transportation Department spokesman Brian Turmail said.

The U.S. Department of Homeland Security had no indication that terrorism played a role in the disaster, Sen. Norm Coleman, R-Minnesota, told CNN.

Coleman said Gov. Tim Pawlenty had told him the 40-year-old bridge was inspected and "given a clean bill of health" three years ago.

The nearby University of Minnesota Medical Center received "just a handful" of injuries from the accident, spokesman Ryan Davenport said.

"One of our hospitals has five patients so far, and the other on the other side of the river has none," he said.

Nancy Ebert of Northwestern Hospital said it had received four injured people -- two children and two adults.

Dr. Joseph Clinton, chief of emergency medicine at Hennepin County Medical Center, said the hospital is treating 28 injured people, six of them critically hurt.

He also said the hospital received one patient who was pronounced dead on arrival. "We have one drowning victim here, and I believe there are more drowning victims at the scene," he said.:(

Two hours after the collapse, a tractor trailer was still burning on the bridge and fire officials were attempting to put out the flames. The vehicle had been cut in half, said Kristi Rollwagen, a spokeswoman for the Minnesota Department of Homeland Security and Emergency Management.

Crews have been using boats to help remove people from the water, bringing them up on the river bank, but bad weather moving into the area could hamper the rescue efforts.

"I don't know how much more could go bad here, but right now, we've got the perfect storm brewing out there, so we're trying to work as hard as we can to pull people out of there" Rollwagen said.

Witnesses told CNN a school bus filled with children was on the bridge when it collapsed, but they also said the bus did not drop into the water and it appeared that the children had all been evacuated.

Aerial footage showed the middle of the bridge caved in, lying in the Mississippi River, with cars both on top and submerged in the water. The main part of the collapsed span is not submerged, but the span clearly separated from the land-based sections of the highway on both the north and south ends of the bridge.

A witness said it looked like "toy cars" were plunging into the water.


"I heard a terrible noise, and then I looked. It seemed like a piece of the bridge was pancaking and going down," said Janet Stately. "I said, 'Did we really see that? Did we really see that?' and it was unbelievable."

About 100,000 cars a day travel over the bridge, according to the Minnesota Department of Transportation
Link
 
Terrible...I've never been fond of bridges I don't like that shit...prayers to the families..just awful
 
My dad is there right now on a business trip... I've been on that bridge about 30 times since 2002... One of my clients lives in greenfield, MN, which is not too far from that bridge..
 
I work for a civil engineering firm so Im sure Ill get all the info from the structures department and let you guys know what the cause of it.
 
I saw this on TV right after it happened and some lady called in and said she heard the noise and felt the rumble and gunned it just to make it off the bridge before it fell.
 
Wow,my thoughts and prayers go out to everyone and their families.
 
One miraculous story in the middle of this tragedy - all 61 people on board this school bus survived:

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http://abcnews.go.com/GMA/story?id=3439611&page=1

Amid the collapsed concrete, eyes were immediately drawn to one thing: a yellow school bus.

"We ran up the incline. There was a school bus full of 8- to 14-year-olds and we literally had to carry them off the bridge," said one survivor who was on the I-35 highway in Minneapolis when it collapsed into the Mississippi River.

There were 61 people on board the bus; 52 of them, children. They were part of an inner-city youth summer program and were on their way back from a day at a water park.

"Me and about two or three other men were actually taking the kids off the bridge and actually lifting them. … There was screaming, crying. Dust just started coming up everywhere," another bridge survivor said.

For the kids and the adults on the bus, it was a terrifying plummet.

"I just felt the bus go down, then I opened my eyes and I see dust. Everybody was trying to get out. We were all screaming," said Jeisy Aguiza, one of the adults on the bus.

Miraculously, even after falling nearly 65 feet, no one on the bus was seriously injured or killed. All of the children have been safely reunited with their families.
 
Things are going to continue to break with cities not reparing/updating certain things that need to be.

This year:
1. NYC Pipe
2. This Bridge
 
The toll keeps climbing. Still like 20 missing but it doesnt look good.:thumbdown
 
Saunders avoids Minnesota bridge collapse
ESPN.com news services

Updated: August 2, 2007, 5:24 PM ET

DETROIT -- Road construction put Detroit Pistons coach Flip Saunders on the 10th Avenue bridge Wednesday in Minneapolis.

The detour perhaps saved his life.

"I usually take the 35W bridge, but the ramp was closed," Saunders said Thursday from Minneapolis in a telephone interview with The Associated Press. "My daughter was driving in a car right behind me when the bridge collapsed -- about 20 yards away from us. It sounded like a bomb when it dropped.

"I got out of my car and the first thing I heard was the kids screaming on the bus. I called 911. I didn't really know what else I could do," he said.

Saunders, a former Minnesota Timberwolves coach, was driving home after speaking at Tubby Smith's basketball camp at the University of Minnesota, where Saunders starred as a player.

"A day later, I'm still in a surreal state of mind," he said. "I can still see what happened. It's kind of like having flashbacks."

Divers checked submerged cars in the Mississippi River on Thursday for victims still trapped beneath the twisted steel and concrete slabs of a collapsed bridge.

"Our staff was in our office when we heard the news and we walked down to the bridge to see if there was anything we could do. ... We were told at the scene there was nothing we could help with and followed the authorities' request to clear the area," Smith said in a statement Thursday. "Obviously, our thoughts and prayers go out to the victims and their families. Our program, athletic department and university will do whatever we can to help our community recover from this disaster."

The eight-lane Interstate 35W bridge, a major Minneapolis artery, was in the midst of repairs when the bridge buckled during the evening rush hour Wednesday. Dozens of cars plummeted more than 60 feet into the river, some falling on top of one another. A school bus sat on the angled concrete.

Information from The Associated Press was used in this report.

http://sports.espn.go.com/nba/news/story?id=2958945
 
^ Wow that's crazy...it's terrible that this happened to anyone in the first place. It's crazy that he was that close when it happened, I know he coached in Minny for a long time but the odds of him being right there would be kinda slim don't you think?
 
Looks like we have the same sort of structurally deficient bridges right here in NE Ohio, including the one many of us travel over everyday to and from work, the Inner Belt Bridge. I never really gave it a second thought when I drive over it, until now...

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http://blog.cleveland.com/plaindealer/2007/08/three_deteriorated_northeast_o.html

NE Ohio has 3 bridges similar to the failed Minn. bridge
Posted by Laura Johnston August 02, 2007 20:00PM

Three deteriorated Northeast Ohio interstate bridges scheduled for replacement feature the same design as the bridge that collapsed during Wednesday's rush hour in Minnesota.

The Inner Belt Bridge and east and west sections of Interstate 90 spanning the Grand River in eastern Lake County are all supported with under-deck trussing, like I-35 in Minneapolis. The three local bridges received poor scores on inspections last fall and are more than 45 years old.

Near Cincinnati, another three interstate bridges share the same construction, with two set for replacement, according to the Ohio Department of Transportation. Statewide on all types of roads, there's an additional 175 bridges with the under-deck truss system.

That type of bridge gets extra attention given its structure, ODOT chief inspector Mike Loeffler told the Associated Press.

"On most of your beamed bridges, if one beam fails, there is enough redundancy that other beams can pick up the force," Loeffler said. With an under-deck truss, "If a fracture should occur, the complete bridge can fall down," he said.

Late Thursday, federal officials urged states to inspect all bridges similar to the Minneapolis bridge. ODOT spokeswoman Lora Hummer said Ohio would comply with any mandate.
 

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