Cable-Stayed Bridges
History, Aesthetics, Developments
Load path: cable stayed v. suspension
Cable stayed bridges in postwar Germany
Visual/structural elements of a cable stayed bridge
Stiffness in cable stayed bridges
American, Japanese, and Swiss cable stayed bridges
www.structurae.de
Saale River Bridge, Nienburg.
Source: Walther, René Ponts haubanées
1818 reconstruction
Navier
1823
Memoir on
Suspension Bridges
1873
www.structurae.de Nicolas Janberg
deck axial forces
Germany rebuilds
F. Dischinger
1887-1953
1955 Stromsund Br.
Theodor Heuss Bridge
F. Leonhardt
www.structurae.de
1961 Severinsbrücke
1962 Norderelbe Br.
1969 Kniebrücke
Janberg - www.structurae.de
1967 Rees Br.
Holzmann – www.structurae.de
1974 Köhlbrand
Janberg – www.structurae.de
1979 Rheinbrücke Flehe
German cable-stayed bridges 1955-1979
Dischinger, Leonhardt, Holmberg, others.
How do innovations arise?
How are innovations related to the culture in which they arise?
How did new technology influence the development?
German cable-stayed bridges 1955-1979
Dischinger, Leonhardt, Holmberg, others.
How do innovations arise?
Pressing social need (15,000 bridges destroyed in the war) and a
system that ultimately proved economical for intermediate spans.
How are innovations related to the culture in which they arise?
Truss bridges also would have worked (cheaper too!). Germans
rejected old forms on aesthetic grounds, instead had an expressed
desire for elegance (technic?) which led to experiments in new forms.
Also, German design competitions led to innovation in systems
How did new technology influence the development?
Structural analysis innovations allowed for new confidence, but new
technology came primarily from construction desires..
Usually if we speak of cable-stayed bridge design
parameters, we have their cable-arrangement, pylon-
geometry, the cross-sections and the materials of their
deck etc. in mind. But the overall layout is considered
to be more or less invariable: a three-span
arrangement with two pylons, a main-span and two
holding down side-spans, and occasionally half of
that with one pylon.
Schlaich, J.
Load Paths in Cable Stayed Bridges
during construction
tension in cable
compression in deck
weight of
deck section
plot of total deck compression
Load Paths in Cable Stayed Bridges
during use
cable system
deck system (beam)
live load
cable-arrangement
cable-arrangement
1961 Severinsbrücke
cable-arrangement
1961 Severinsbrücke
1957 Theodor Heuss Bridge
cable-arrangement
cable-arrangement
1955 Stromsund Br.
cable-arrangement
1955 Stromsund Br.
1967 Rees Br.
pylon-geometry
pylon-geometry
pylon-geometry
cable-stayed pylons/towers
suspension bridge towers
cross-sections
German examples 1955-1979
Dischinger, Leonhardt, Holmberg, others.
cable-arrangement: fan or harp, single or multiple
pylon-geometry: portal, A, tower, inverted Y (!)
deck cross-sections: rigid ! flexible, continuous
materials: almost exclusively steel
the exception to the German rule
1962
Maracaibo Br.
by
R. Morandi
1962
Maracaibo Br.
by
R. Morandi
Anez – www.structurae.de
2004
Milau Viaduct
by
M. Virogleux
Temporary wind restraints for Ting Kau during construction
The American Experience
The Japanese Experience
1977 Rokko Br.
Hitsuishijima and Iwagurojima
Meiko Nishi Br.
Yokohama Bay Br.
Swiss cable-stayed
Christian Menn’s designs
(we will learn more about Menn...)
Mathis – www.structurae.de
“experiments” in cable-stayed forms
J. Schlaich
Usually if we speak of cable-stayed bridge design parameters, we have their cable-
arrangement, pylon-geometry, the cross-sections and the materials of their deck
etc. in mind. But the overall layout is considered to be more or less invariable: a
three-span arrangement with two pylons, a main-span and two holding down side-
spans, and occasionally half of that with one pylon.
However, the cable-stayed bridge concept offers more and
can adapt to very special boundary
conditions…the outcome may be e.g. one out of a large
number of feasible multi-span arrangements, or a
combination of cable-stayed and cable-supported. Other
situations may call for cable-stayed
bridges, where the deck is not straight in plan but curved,
or even for convertible or folding decks.
Schlaich, J.
where do we go from here?
(2008 Sutong Br. in China., 1088m became the longest)
7 of the 10 longest cable-stayed bridges are now in China
Since 2000 over ! of all long-span cable stayed bridges (>20)
have been completed in China.
Announcements
– Modeling HW due next Tuesday
– Modeling help session Monday 6:00 in 211
Marston