by Outcast_Searcher » Tue 04 May 2021, 14:21:33
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('jedrider', '[')url]https://www.bbc.com/news/world-latin-america-56977129[/url]
Mexico City metro overpass collapse kills 23
I could have been a structural engineer possibly as I like gawking at these manmade disasters.
Somebody tell me that this structure is not just concrete and rebar without the use of steel beams?
How could something like that hold up for it's intended use?
The BBC article you linked to has the mayor saying, "it appeared a girder had given way", which if true, implies the use of beams (and I presume steel for that application).
OTOH, it also says "the line was inaugurated less than a decade ago", and if properly designed, such failures should NOT occur within a decade. Or several decades for that matter, assuming proper inspections and maintenance (like for corrosion) are done.
There will be an investigation. Clearly, engineering error, incompetence in construction, incompetence and/or corruption in materials (like the beam), corruption in construction (were shortcuts taken to lower costs, or deals made to falsify paperwork and siphon off money?) are possibilities until it's proven otherwise. No report of explosions, etc., so I presume no terrorism at this point.
Given that the US has plenty of its OWN serious infrastructure problems, it's not like we should be pointing fingers. It's just tragic that this kind of thing has to occur, which should be entirely preventable if the job is done right (short of a SERIOUSLY massive earthquake that exceeds design specs or some other disaster of similar scale).
Given the track record of the perma-doomer blogs, I wouldn't bet a fast crash doomer's money on their predictions.