Tasman Bridge disaster

Tasman Bridge disaster

Infobox
name=Tasman Bridge
title=Tasman Bridge


caption=Tasman Bridge in Hobart, Tasmania. January 1975. After being hit by bulk carrier "MV Lake Illawarra".
headerstyle = background:#ccf;
labelstyle = background:#ddf;
header1 = Locale
data3 = Hobart, Tasmania. Australia
header4 = Collapse
label5 = Hit by "Lake Illawarra"
data5 = January 5, 1975
header6 = Crosses
data7 = Derwent River, Hobart.
The Tasman Bridge disaster occurred on the evening of 5 January 1975, in Hobart, the capital city of Australia's island state of Tasmania, when a bulk ore carrier travelling up the Derwent River collided with several pylons of the Tasman Bridge, causing the collapse of a large section of the bridge deck onto the ship and into the river below. Twelve people were killed, including seven crew on board the ship, and the five occupants of four cars which fell 45 m (150 feet) after driving off the bridge. The disaster severed the main link between Hobart and its eastern suburbs, and is notable for the social impacts that resulted from the loss of such an important road artery.

Collision and Collapse

The collision occurred at 9:27 pm (Australian Eastern Standard Time) on Sunday January 5, 1975. The bulk carrier "Lake Illawarra", carrying 10,000 tonnes of zinc ore, was heading up the Derwent River to offload its cargo to the Electrolytic Zinc Company at Pascotine. The ship was off course as it neared the bridge, partly because of the strong tidal current but also due to the inattention of the captain. Initially approaching the bridge at eight knots, the captain slowed the ship to a 'safe' speed. Athough the Lake Illawarra was capable of passing through the bridge's central navigation span, the captain attempted to pass through one of the eastern spans. [cite web|url=http://www.smso.net/MV_Lake_Illawarra|title=MV Lake Illawarra|publisher=smso.net|accessdate=2008-10-02]

Despite several changes of course, the ship proved unmanageable due to its insufficient speed relative to the current. In desperation the captain ordered 'full speed astern', at which point all control was lost. The vessel drifted towards the bridge about midway between the navigation span and the eastern shore, crashing into the pile capping of piers 18 and 19, bringing three unsupported spans and a 127 m section of roadway crashing into the river and onto the vessel's deck. The ship listed to starboard and sank within minutes in 35 m of water a short distance to the south. Seven crew members on the "Lake Illawarra" were trapped and subsequently drowned. A subsequent inquiry found that the captain had not handled the ship in a proper and seamanlike manner, and his certificate was suspended for 6 months. [cite web|url=http://oceans1.customer.netspace.net.au/tas-wrecks.html|title=Tasmanian Shipwrecks|publisher=Oceans Enterprises|accessdate=2008-10-02]

Because the collision occurred on a Sunday evening shortly after Christmas, there was relatively little traffic on the bridge. If it had been a weekday after schools had resumed and businesses had re-opened, the death toll would have been far higher. While no cars were travelling between the 18th and 19th pylons when that section collapsed, four cars drove over the gap, killing all five occupants. Two drivers managed to stop their vehicles at the edge, but not before their front wheels had dropped over the lip of the bridge deck, narrowly escaping certain death. One of these cars contained Frank and Sylvia Manley, travelling with two young children in the back seat.

Sylvia Manley: "As we approached, it was a foggy night...there was no lights on the bridge at the time. We just thought there was an accident. We slowed down to about 40 ks and I'm peering out the window, desperately looking to see the car...what was happening on the bridge. We couldn't see anything but we kept on travelling. The next thing, I said to Frank, "The bridge is gone!" And he just applied the brakes and we just sat there swinging." cite web|url=http://www.abc.net.au/dimensions/dimensions_in_time/Transcripts/s476959.htm|title=The Monaro Man|publisher=Australian Broadcasting Corporation
date= March 2002|accessdate=2008-10-02
] "As we sat there, we couldn’t see anything in the water. All we could see was a big whirlpool of water and apparently the boat was sinking. So with that, we undid the car door and I hopped out." cite web|url=http://australianetwork.com/nexus/stories/TASMANBRIDGE.htm
title=Tasman Bridge|publisher=Australia Network|date=15 January 2007|accessdate=2008-10-02
]

Frank Manley: " [Sylivia] said “The white line, the white line’s gone. Stop!" I just hit the brakes and I said “I can’t, I can’t, I can’t stop.” And next thing we just hung off the gap...when I swung the door open, I could see, more or less, see the water...and I just swung meself towards the back of the car and grabbed the headrest like that to pull myself around. There's a big automatic transmission pan underneath [the car] - that's what it balanced on."

Emergency Response

A large number of organisations were involved in the emergency response, including police, ambulance service, fire brigade, Royal Hobart Hospital, Civil Defence, the Hobart Tug Company, Marine Board of Hobart, Public Works Department, Transport Commission, HydroElectric Commission, Hobart Regional Water Board, the Australian Army and the Royal Australian Navy.At 2:30 am, a 14-man Navy Clearance Diving Team flew to Hobart to assist Water Police in the recovery of the vehicles which had driven off the bridge. Two vehicles were identified on 7 January; one salvaged that day and the second three days later. Another vehicle was found buried under rubble on 8th January. A comprehensive survey of the wreck of the Lake Illawarra was completed by 13 January. The divers operated in hazardous conditions, with minimal visibility and strong river currents, contending with bridge debris such as shattered concrete, reinforced steel rods, railings, pipes, lights, wire and power cables. Strong winds on the third day brought down debris from the bridge above, and caused unguarded ‘live’ power cables to fall into the water, endangering the divers. [cite web|url=http://www.navy.gov.au/w/images/PIAMA16.pdf|title=Australian Maritime Issues 2005|publisher=Royal Australian Navy|date=13 April 2006|accessdate=2008-09-30|]

A divided city

Facilities

The collapse of Tasman Bridge isolated two sides of the city which had heavily relied upon it for most daily activities. [cite book |last=Lee|first=T|title=Adjustment in the Urban System: The Tasman Bridge Collapse and Its Effects Upon Metropolitan Hobart|publisher=Pergamon|year=1981] 30% of the population lived on the eastern shore and were effectively isolated. The day after the incident, as some 30,000 residents set out for work, they found that the former three-minute commute over the bridge had turned into a ninety-minute trip. Within an hour of the incident, the Sullivans Cove Ferry Company started services between both shores of the river, and continued their services throughout the night.

Three private ferries and a government vessel were in place the next day. People on the Eastern Shore quickly became isolated, as most schools, hospitals, businesses and government offices were located on the Western Shore. Prior to the disaster, many services on the eastern shore were severely lacking. Access to medical services in particular, posed problems for residents in the east, as services consisted only of local clinics. Hobart's hospitals (the Royal Hobart Hospital and the Calvary Hospital were located on the Western Shore. What was previously a short drive across the river became a 50 km (31 mile) trip via the estuary's other bridge in Bridgewater. Hobart's cultural activities, such as theatres, cinemas, the museum and art gallery, restaurants, meeting places, lecture theatres and the botanical gardens, were largely based on the western shore.cite web
url=http://www.ema.gov.au/agd/EMA/rwpattach.nsf/viewasattachmentpersonal/(C86520E41F5EA5C8AAB6E66B851038D8)~Tasman_Bridge_disaster_25th_anniversary_memorial_service.pdf/$file/Tasman_Bridge_disaster_25th_anniversary_memorial_service.pdf
title=Tasman Bridge Disaster 25th Anniversary|publisher=Emergency Management Australia|date=13 March 2001|accessdate=2008-10-03
]

Social Effects

The collapse of the bridge meant not just a detour, but a variety of social and psychological difficulties as well. Although comparatively minor in loss of life and damage, it presented a problem beyond the capacity of the community to resolve.cite web|url=http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,914536,00.html
title=The Bridge of Sighs|publisher=Time Magazine|date=16 August 1976|accessdate=2008-10-03
] The disaster had a number of unique characteristics and occurred at a time when the effects of disasters on communities were not well understood. Opportunities for the community to be involved in the response to the disaster and the physical restoration of infrastructure were minimal because of the nature of the event. It is likely that this lack of contribution contributed to the enduring nature of the effects of the disaster on a number of individuals.

There were a range of effects on the community, including psychological effects arising from anger, uncertainty, inconvenience and dissatisfaction. Fatigue and reduced family contact were some of the consequences of the additional travel demands. Alcohol sales on the ferries were substantial, placing additional demands on relationships. Social contact was reduced. Many people with part-time jobs, particularly women, gave up work because of the cost and time involved in travelling. Phobias of water, ships and crowds became apparent in some people. The difficulties were exacerbated by the lack of hospital services and specialists on the eastern shore. Pregnant women in particular felt very insecure. A number of businesses closed.

A study of police data found that in the six months after the disaster, crime rose 41% on the eastern shore, while the rate on the city's western side fell. Car theft rose almost 50% in the isolated community, and neighborhood quarrels and complaints rose 300%. Frustration and anger was directed towards the transport services. Visible progress on restoration of the bridge was slow because of the need for extensive underwater surveys of debris and the time required for design of the rebuilding. The ferry queues did however provide some assistance by providing a forum where people with much in common could vent their frustration. A sociological study described how the physical isolation led to debonding (the setting aside of bonds that constitute the fabric of normal social life). The loss of the Tasman Bridge in Hobart disconnected two parts of the city and had far reaching effects of the people separated. [cite web|url=http://www.ema.gov.au/agd/EMA/rwpattach.nsf/viewasattachmentpersonal/(63F21BC6A4528BAE4CED2F9930C45677)~Rob+Gordon+-+EMA+Rec+Man+Appendix+D4+.pdf/$file/Rob+Gordon+-+EMA+Rec+Man+Appendix+D4+.pdf|title=The Social Dimension Of Emergency Recovery|publisher=Emergency Management Australia|date=24 September 2003|accessdate=2008-09-30]

Rebuilding

Development on the eastern shore

The disaster stimulated development in Kingborough, a municipality south of Hobart on the western shore, because of the reduced travel times for western shore workers compared to the eastern shore. The eastern shore eventually became a more self-contained community, with a higher level of employment and improved services and amenities, than had been the case prior to the disaster. The previous imbalance between facilities and employment opportunities was redressed as a result of the disaster.

Repairing the Tasman Bridge

In March 1975, a Joint Tasman Bridge Restoration Commission was appointed to restore the Tasman Bridge. The reconstruction of the bridge included the modification of the whole bridge to accommodate an extra traffic lane to allow for a peak period 'tidal flow' system of three lanes for major flow and two for the minor flow. Approximately one year after the bridge collapse, a temporary bailey bridge, linking the eastern and western shores of the Derwent, was opened. cite web|url=http://www.abs.gov.au/Ausstats/ABS@.nsf/Latestproducts/1301.6Feature%20Article192000?opendocument&tabname=Summary&prodno=1301.6&issue=2000&num=&view=|title=Tasmanian Year Book 2000|publisher=Australian Bureau of Statistics|date=December 2006|accessdate=2008-09-30]

Specialists in marine engineering undertook an extensive investigation to locate bridge debris. This survey took a number of months to complete, and parts of the bridge weighing up to 500 tons were accurately located using equipment developed by the University of Tasmania and the Public Works Department. Maunsell and Partners were appointed consultants for the rebuilding project. The firm John Holland was awarded the construction contract. The Federal Government agreed to fund the project, which began in October 1975. [cite web|url=http://www.parliament.tas.gov.au/history/tbstats.htm|title=Tasman Bridge Statistics|publisher=Government of Tasmania|accessdate=2008-09-30|] Engineers decide not to replace pier 19 as there was too much debris on the site. [cite web|url=http://www.parliament.tas.gov.au/history/brd3.htm
title=Tasman Bridge Disaster|publisher=Government of Tasmania|accessdate=2008-09-30
] The Tasman Bridge was re-opened on 8 October 1977, nearly three years after its collapse.cite web|url=http://www.ema.gov.au/ema/emadisasters.nsf/c85916e930b93d50ca256d050020cb1f/a2139c958151bd18ca256d33000583c3?OpenDocument
title=The Tasman Bridge Collapse|publisher=Emergency Management Australia|accessdate=2008-09-30
] The annual expenditures on the Tasman Bridge reconstruction was $1.7 m in 1974-75; $12.3 m in 1975-76; $13.2 m in 1976-77 and $6.lm in 1977-78. [cite web|url=http://www.bitre.gov.au/publications/07/Files/IP003.pdf|title=Australian Road Financing Statistics 1970-1980|publisher=Bureau of Transport Economics|date=9 March 2001|accessdate=2008-09-30]

The Tasman Bridge disaster shares some common features with the Skyway Bridge collapse in Florida in 1980, and the I-40 Bridge Disaster Oklahoma, 2002, both involving collisions with ships. It has been noted that during the bridge's engineering design phase, the impact of a ship was not considered. [cite web
url=http://www.becollege.org/projects/1stAlumniLecture-part1.pdf
title=Pile-supported Structures|publisher=Tokyo Institute of Technology|date=2 May 2004|accessdate=2008-10-05
] When river traffic "comprises large vessels, even atlow speed, the consequences of pier failure can be catastrophic". In the field of structural engineering, the concept of ‘pier-redundant’ bridges, refers to a bridge superstructure which does not collapse when a single pier is removed. [citeweb|url=http://www.bridgeforum.org/files/pub/2004/austroads5/095_Rapattoni%20Austroads04.pdf|title=Safety First for Bridge Design|publisher=AustRoads, republished by Cambridge University Dept. of Engineering|date=3 May 2004|accessdate=2008-10-05] Two ‘pier-redundant’ bridges have been constructed in Australia - over the Murray River at Berri and at Hindmarsh Island in South Australia. The probability of ship impact is now regularly evaluated by specialist consultants when designing major bridges. One solution is to protect bridge piers through strengthening or the construction of impact-resistant barriers [cite web
url=http://www.sh.tu-harburg.de/starossek/Veroeffentlichungen/Dateien/Collapse%20resistance%20and%20robustness%20of%20bridges%20(Starossek).pdf
title=Collapse resistance and robustness of bridges|publisher=International Association for Bridge Maintenance Safety and Management|date=1 April 2008|accessdate=2008-10-05
]

The disaster resulted in changes to the regulations pertaining to shipping movements on the Derwent River. The Marine and Safety (Pilotage and Navigation) Regulations (2007) contains specific provisions dealing with the Bridge, eg:

"The master of a vessel approaching the Bridge to navigate it through a span must (a) have the vessel fully under control; and (b) navigate the vessel with all possible care at the minimum speed required to pass safely under the bridge"." [cite web|url=http://www.thelaw.tas.gov.au/tocview/index.w3p;cond=;doc_id=%2B59%2B2007%2BAT%40EN%2B20081005210000;histon=;prompt=;rec=;term=|title=Marine and Safety (Pilotage and Navigation) Regulations|publisher=Government of Tasmania|accessdate=2008-10-05]
Vessels above a certain size are required to be piloted, and vehicle movements on the bridge are temporarily halted when large vessels are to pass underneath the bridge.

Memorial

A small service, led by members of the Tasmanian Council of Churches, was held on the occasion of the reopening on Saturday 8 October 1977. A large memorial service was eventually held 25 years after the disaster, in January 2000. In his address to the gathering, the Tasmanian Premier stated that some people were still struggling with the memories of its effects, and he commended the resilience of the community in coping with the disaster. The Governor at the time, Sir Guy Green, described the pain and loss of loved ones and the social and economic disruption. He paid tribute to the efforts of emergency services personnel in responding to the disaster. He said that the "eastern shore had emerged more self-sufficient in the wake of the tragedy" and that "Tasmanians were now stronger, more self-reliant and mature". A plaque commemorating the tragedy was affixed to the main bridge support on the eastern shoreline.

References

Further Reading

* Lewis, T. By Derwent divided: the story of "Lake Illawarra", the Tasman Bridge and the 1975 disaster. Darwin : Tall Stories, 1999. ISBN 0957735111
* Ludeke, M. Ten events shaping Tasmania's history. Hobart, Tas. : Ludeke, 2006 ISBN 0957928424

External links

* [http://www.parliament.tas.gov.au/history/brd1.htm The Severed Artery]
* [http://www.ccc.tas.gov.au/site/page.cfm?u=424 Clarence City Council on disaster]
* [http://travelmedia.tourismtasmania.com.au/inspired/history/bridge.html Tourism Tasmania page (disaster)]
* [http://australianetwork.com/nexus/stories/s1744515.htm Australia Network news page]
* [http://www.parliament.tas.gov.au/history/tbstats.htm Statistics on the bridge]


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