The transformation of a 30 m long timber pedestrian bridge into a wobbly (laterally swaying) bridge with a dramatically reduced first lateral modal frequency has been monitored by seven annual, multi-sensor surveys. This evidence, in combination with analysis of the wind record, observations of local damage and evidence of wind-induced excitations from other bridges, is used to present a multi-stage scenario of the extraordinary structural weakening of our study bridge in only a few years. Our analysis is constrained by observations of asymmetric damage (longitudinal splitting cracks around metallic connections along the south side of the deck, not explained by ordinary, essentially symmetric lateral oscillations) and over-threshold analysis of strong northerly wind events, including gusts. The proposed scenario is that an unexpected for the area icing event took advantage of construction vicissitudes and produced damage that reduced the lateral stiffness of the bridge, especially of the arch superstructure. In addition, strong winds sharing common direction with gusts produced a combination of semi-static lateral bending and of dynamic oscillations, leading to numerous cycles of asymmetric high amplitude lateral deflections producing tensile stress normal to grain, cracks localized in connections, and fatigue. The vertical stiffness of the bridge was only slightly affected.
Vision-based techniques are frequently used to compute the dynamic deflections of bridges but they are rather computationally complicated and require demanding instrumentation. In this article, we show that it is possible to reconstruct the 2-D kinematics of flexible bridges using a simplified algorithm to analyze common video imagery. The only requirements are that the movement of the control points is clearly visible on the images and that next to each control point, there exist vertical and horizontal bridge elements defining the image scale. We applied this technique during controlled, forced excitations of a timber bridge that was stiff in the vertical but very flexible in the lateral axis because of cumulated damage. We used videos from low-cost cameras, in which the changes of the pixel coordinates of several control points during excitation events and their attenuation were clear. These videos were obtained during two annual structural health monitoring surveys using numerous sensors (Global Navigation Satellite Systems (GNSS), robotic total station (RTS), accelerometers), and hence the output of the video analysis was fully controlled. Because of various errors, the transformation of the video image coordinates into bridge coordinates yielded spurious deflections along the main axis of the bridge, which were used to control the uncertainty of our results. We found that the computed lateral deflections (i) were statistically significant, (ii) satisfied structural constraints, and (iii) were consistent with structural estimates derived from other sensors. Additionally, they provided accurate estimates of the natural frequency and the damping factor of the bridge. This approach can be applied in other cases of monitoring of flexible structures if the requirements for planar deformation, pixel resolution and scale definition are satisfied.
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