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Rion-Antirion Bridge, Greece. Presented by James Mitchell, Dan Bundy and Hung Nguyen

Rion-Antirion Bridge, Greece. Presented by James Mitchell, Dan Bundy and Hung Nguyen

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Page 1: Rion-Antirion Bridge, Greece. Presented by James Mitchell, Dan Bundy and Hung Nguyen

Rion-Antirion Bridge, Greece.

Presented by James Mitchell, Dan Bundy and Hung Nguyen

Page 2: Rion-Antirion Bridge, Greece. Presented by James Mitchell, Dan Bundy and Hung Nguyen

• Spans 2880m across Gulf of Corinth

• Links town of Rion to mainland

Greece

• Previous crossings by boat took 45

minutes, reduced to 5

• Completed August 2004, 4 months

ahead of schedule

• Second longest cable stayed deck in

the world

• Cost €630 million

1. SITE DESCRIPTION1. Introduction

Rio

Antirrio

Page 3: Rion-Antirion Bridge, Greece. Presented by James Mitchell, Dan Bundy and Hung Nguyen

2. Geology

Geological conditions

1. Subsoil Steep slopes on each side

and long plateau seabed 65m below water surface.

Site investigations found no bedrock at depths of 100m

The weak alluvial deposits of interbeded granular and cohesive layers continue down to a predicted 1000m.

Interspersed with liquefiable sand pockets

Page 4: Rion-Antirion Bridge, Greece. Presented by James Mitchell, Dan Bundy and Hung Nguyen

2. Geology

Geological conditions

2. Tectonic movement

The Corinth Rift is caused by a geological feature known as a ‘Graben’

The rift is relatively young at 2-5 million years old

North and south sides separating due to tectonic forces by up to ~15 millimetres per year

Uplifting of its southern shore approximately 1mm per year.

Page 5: Rion-Antirion Bridge, Greece. Presented by James Mitchell, Dan Bundy and Hung Nguyen

2. Geology

Geological conditions

3. Seismic activity

This area is one of the most seismic regions in Europe.

Seismicity lies between antithetic faults, the Alepohori fault dipping north and the Kaparelli fault dipping south

The circle symbols on the map represent historical earthquakes with a magnitude greater than 5.5 Richter.

Page 6: Rion-Antirion Bridge, Greece. Presented by James Mitchell, Dan Bundy and Hung Nguyen

An exceptional combination of geological conditions present

many challenges in the engineering of The Rion Antirion Bridge:

Creating stable foundations on porous granular soils in deep seabed

Reduced effective strength

Tectonic movement

Possible seismic activity

Isolation of bridge deck to seismic energy- reduce sway

Reduce dynamic response under wind loading

Liquefaction of soil

Movement of foundations

Expansion of rift

Elongation of bridge deck

3. The challenges

Page 7: Rion-Antirion Bridge, Greece. Presented by James Mitchell, Dan Bundy and Hung Nguyen

Possible Solutions

• Could not tunnel due to seismic activity• Bridge only option• Minimum number of seabed supports

desired• Two choices:

• Suspension• Cable Stayed

• Antirion side of gulf possessed slope stability problem

• Could not install large ground anchors needed for suspension bridge

• Cable stayed bridge only option

4. Engineering solutions

Page 8: Rion-Antirion Bridge, Greece. Presented by James Mitchell, Dan Bundy and Hung Nguyen

• Soil strengthened with steel inclusions

• 200 Hollow steel tubes 2m in diameter, 25-

30m long driven into soil beneath each

pier

• Covered by 3m thick gravel layer to reduce

shear force transfer to substructure

• 90m diameter footings rest on top

• No connection between footings and gravel

• Pylons are able to lift or slide up to 2m in

an earthquake

Foundation

4. Engineering solutions

Page 9: Rion-Antirion Bridge, Greece. Presented by James Mitchell, Dan Bundy and Hung Nguyen

• Bridge deck is fully suspended by the cables

• Isolated as much as possible from piers to

reduce seismic impacts

• Longitudinally, expansion joints allow

adjustment to thermal and seismic

movements

• Deck can withstand movements of 2m

between each set of piers

• Fuse restraints installed on pylons, as gulf

expands load cell monitors identify change in

load and dampers can be extended

• Allow for 2-5m expansion over 125 years

Bridge deck

4. Engineering solutions

Page 10: Rion-Antirion Bridge, Greece. Presented by James Mitchell, Dan Bundy and Hung Nguyen

• 4 Dampers and a fuse restraint at each pylon isolate bridge deck in transverse direction

• 10500kN fuse restraint keeps deck rigid during high winds

• Fails under seismic events allowing bridge to swing with 3500kN dampers

• This is the only connection between pylons and bridge deck

• Deck designed to move 2m in all directions

Bridge deck

4. Engineering solutions

Page 11: Rion-Antirion Bridge, Greece. Presented by James Mitchell, Dan Bundy and Hung Nguyen

5. Construction methods Construction of the foundation footings in

a dry dock. In parallel, driving steel inclusions is

carried out to strengthen soil. Towing and mooring of these footings to a

wet dock site. Immersion of the foundations at final

position. Erection of the prefabricated bridge deck

 using the balanced free-cantilever technique