Self-anchored suspension bridge

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Self-anchored suspension bridge
Three self-anchored suspension bridges in Pittsburgh
Ancestor Suspension bridge
Related None
Descendant None
Carries Pedestrians, automobiles, trucks, light rail
Span range Medium
Material Steel rope, steel eyebar, concrete spar, post-tensioned concrete deck
Movable No
Design effort high
Falsework required Sometimes

A self-anchored suspension bridge is a suspension bridge in which the main cables do not attach to the ground via large anchorages; instead, the main cables attach to the ends of the road deck, which experiences compression equal to the tension in the cables. The result of this design is that the bridge does not exert any horizontal pulling forces on the ground; the bridge foundations need only support the bridge's weight. Therefore, the self-anchored suspension bridge design is well-suited for construction atop elevated piers, or in areas of unstable soils where anchorages would be difficult to construct.

Contents

The Three Sisters Bridges of Pittsburgh are the earliest examples (1924-28) of this bridge type in the US. Currently the largest self-anchored suspension bridges are the Konohana Bridge in Japan and the Yeongjong Grand Bridge in South Korea. Both of these bridges have a central span of 300 meters. The eastern span replacement of the San Francisco-Oakland Bay Bridge (currently under construction) will be larger when completed.

falsework at left
falsework at left


Because the primary cables cannot be anchored until the bridge deck is completed, a self-anchored suspension bridge requires some falsework during construction. This falsework may take the form of compression struts (pictured here [1] and in the above diagram) which hold up the main cables (or the parts of them which have already been constructed), allowing the ends of the span to be constructed first in the fashion of a cantilever bridge, or it may be in the form of underdeck falsework.

Hutsonville Bridge cable anchor detail
Hutsonville Bridge cable anchor detail

As in a traditional suspension bridge, the primary cable type may be multiple parallel independent cables as in the image at left of the Hutsonville Bridge, or eyebars, or a more conventional composite cable.

detail of compression tube and tension cables on Royal Albert Bridge, 1859, Brunel, Saltash UK
detail of compression tube and tension cables on Royal Albert Bridge, 1859, Brunel, Saltash UK


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