A preliminary investigation of the potential benefits of using the ASTRA Bridge for short-span bridge deck refurbishment projects in Switzerland

Journal Article (2022)
Author(s)

Marco Zumstein (ETH Zürich)

Qian Chen (ETH Zürich, University of British Columbia)

Bryan T. Adey (ETH Zürich)

Daniel M. Hall (TU Delft - Design & Construction Management, ETH Zürich)

Research Group
Design & Construction Management
Copyright
© 2022 Marco Zumstein, Qian Chen, Bryan T. Adey, Daniel M. Hall
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1080/15732479.2022.2152842
More Info
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Publication Year
2022
Language
English
Copyright
© 2022 Marco Zumstein, Qian Chen, Bryan T. Adey, Daniel M. Hall
Research Group
Design & Construction Management
Issue number
11
Volume number
20
Pages (from-to)
1629-1647
Reuse Rights

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Abstract

How bridge refurbishment projects are performed requires a trade-off between the speed and cost of the project and the amount of traffic disturbances during the project. A possible way to help reach a better balance between these two extremes is the ASTRA Bridge developed in Switzerland. The ASTRA Bridge is a 236-meter long steel ramp system on wheels, which is placed on top of the bridge deck undergoing refurbishment to enable vehicles to continue to pass over the bridge while construction work progresses underneath. This study illustrates new refurbishment processes by using the ASTRA Bridge and presents the first quantitative analysis of the effects of using the ASTRA Bridge on the time, costs and traffic disturbances associated with bridge refurbishment. The bridge investigated is a short-span (50 m long) highway bridge requiring refurbishment of its superstructure. The analysis indicates that the use of the ASTRA Bridge resulted in reductions in duration and costs (14% and 3% for the example), and a substantial reduction in user costs (51% for the example). Although more analysis is required for different types of refurbishment projects, the initial results indicate that the ASTRA Bridge may become an integral part of future highway bridge refurbishment projects.

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