45 Freeway Bridges to Be Braced : Roads: The overpasses on major county thoroughfares will be retrofitted before the end of 1995 as part of a speeded-up statewide effort.
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Forty-five bridges on Ventura County’s major freeways are slated for seismic retrofitting by the end of 1995 as part of a hastened statewide effort to keep bridges from crumbling during earthquakes.
Responding to the collapse of six major roadways in Los Angeles in the Jan. 17 earthquake, state officials have announced they will speed up repairs to 1,000 elevated highway sections singled out as most vulnerable to damage after the 1989 Loma Prieta quake.
All of Ventura County’s 322 highway bridges withstood the Northridge quake, including eight recently reinforced single-column models, which are considered particularly susceptible to damage.
Work has already begun on several of the additional 45 county bridges targeted for retrofitting under the statewide plan. More bridges may be added to the list in June, when Caltrans completes the screening of an additional 1,500 bridges throughout the state.
“This is a fluid project that is still being developed,” California Department of Transportation spokesman Jim Drago said. “Our idea is to identify the bridges and push them through as quickly as we can.”
The retrofitting work often involves digging around the footing of a bridge, wrapping it with steel and concrete and hooking cables to bridge decks to keep them from caving in during quakes.
To speed up the process, state administrators plan to ask the Legislature to weed out unnecessary regulatory barriers. They will also permit Caltrans to hire outside contractors to help with retrofit engineering and design.
Ventura city engineer Nazir Lalani said he was concerned that the retrofitting project might disrupt long-term plans for more extensive freeway repairs.
“We’ve got projects scheduled for two, three or four years from now, and I’d be concerned if they came and said we’re going to do the retrofitting now and the rest later,” Lalani said. “If you start messing with a project like that, it could really cause problems.
Drago said Caltrans was eager to avoid any disruption of scheduled projects.
“We’re going to look at each case and consider what is happening and what is planned,” Drago said. “We’re going to try to use some common sense on this process.”
Dean Dunphy, secretary of the state’s Business, Transportation and Housing Agency, will oversee the plan at the state level. An ombudsman will be appointed to work with local governments to streamline construction.
Funding for the retrofitting project, estimated at more than $1 billion statewide, will come from the state highway account, which is supported primarily by the gasoline tax.
Ventura County’s 924-mile freeway system escaped the Jan. 17 earthquake with little damage.
Highway workers quickly repaired damage to the Simi Valley Freeway, grinding down or repaving buckled portions of the ramps leading to the freeway from surface streets in the city.
One freeway overpass at Sunset Hills Boulevard in Thousand Oaks was closed briefly after the earthquake while Caltrans workers inspected cracks in the roadway, said Dave Servaes, Caltrans regional manager for Ventura County.
The chipping was found to be superficial and the pass was reopened.
Servaes said most of the bridges requiring retrofitting were built before standards were toughened.
“These are older bridges,” Servaes said. “Now when we have a project, we build it to include all the latest technology.”
Bridge Repairs
Under the accelerated state plan, 45 elevated highway sections in Ventura County are slated for seismic retrofitting by the end of 1995. Work is already under way at some of the sites.
VENTURA FREEWAY
Borchard Road overpass, Thousand Oaks
Wendy Drive overpass, Thousand Oaks
Central Avenue overpass, Camarillo
Almond Drive overpass, Oxnard
Ventura Road ramp, Oxnard
Santa Clara River bridge, between Oxnard and Ventura
Montalvo Drive overpass
Telephone Road underpass, Ventura
Ventura-Santa Paula Freeway connector
Lemon Grove Avenue overpass, Ventura
San Jon Road overpass, Ventura
Ventura Avenue underpass, Ventura
West Ventura overpass, Ventura
Ventura River overpass, Ventura
West Main Street underpass, Ventura
Seacliff overpass, near Ventura
PACIFIC COAST HIGHWAY/CALIFORNIA 1
3rd Street overpass, Oxnard
Camarillo bridge overpass, Oxnard
Frontage Road overpass, Oxnard
Pacific Coast Highway-Ventura Freeway connector, Oxnard
MOORPARK FREEWAY/CALIFORNIA 23
Santa Clara River overpass, Fillmore
Avenida de las Flores overpass, Thousand Oaks
SIMI VALLEY FREEWAY/CALIFORNIA 118
California 118-Santa Paula Freeway connector, Ventura
Santa Clara River overpass, Saticoy
Kuehner Drive underpass, Simi Valley
SANTA PAULA FREEWAY/CALIFORNIA 126
Kimball Road overpass, Ventura
Saticoy Avenue overpass, Ventura
Victoria Avenue overpass, Ventura
Main Street underpass, Santa Paula
Sespe Creek bridge
Piru Creek bridge
OJAI FREEWAY/CALIFORNIA 33
Ojai Freeway-Ventura Freeway connector
Garden Street overpass, Ventura
Main Street ramp, Ventura
MARICOPA HIGHWAY/CALIFORNIA 33
LOS PADRES NATIONAL FOREST
McDonald Creek bridge
Matilija Creek bridge
Tule Creek bridge
Sespe Creek bridge
Castle Creek bridge
Round Spring Creek bridge
Corral Canyon Creek bridge
Apache Canyon Creek bridge
CALIFORNIA 34
Lewis Road overpass, Camarillo
CALIFORNIA 150
Coyote Creek bridge
Ventura River bridge
Source: State Department of Transportation
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