Post by John F. CarrSeveral people have died after being dismembered by pedestrian
handrails in the Big Dig tunnels, according to the Boston Globe.
The handrails have been dubbed the "ginsu guardrails," after the
knives advertised on TV, by some police officers called to the
grisly crashes.
...
"That railing doesn't appear to adhere to any crashworthy design I've
seen, and it should," said Dean Sicking, who is principal author of
the standard national reference manual for evaluating the safety of
roadside structures.
<http://www.boston.com/news/local/massachusetts/articles/2010/02/14/th...>
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Reading that Globe article today made me very sad. I've always looked
with disdain at those railings, primarily because I saw them as a huge
waste of money. Instead of using cheaper, industry standard railings,
perhaps made of a less-expensive steel, I thought it was pretty stupid
to make fancy railings that, because of their location, were only
destined to be smashed by vehicles anyway! Many sections are now
missing altogether, which as I read today is actually for the better.
I believe the reason for the railings is because consulting companies
like Parsons-Brinkerhoff are paid based on the cost of the
construction and fixtures they specify. They make even more money by
creating their own custom designs, rather than using off-the-shelf
fixtures. In addition to needlessly escalating the initial cost of a
project, it creates a legacy of huge maintenance costs into the future
because replacement parts for the custom designs are expensive if not
impossible to obtain. More often, the expensive fixtures receive
little if any maintenance and become useless to their original
purpose. So, why else spend the extra money to specify them in the
first place?
This "culture" was/is not limited to the Big Dig. Take a look anywhere
on the MBTA and you'll find custom specified designs that cost much
more than off-the-shelf hardware that could do the same thing cheaper
and usually better. Start with, for example, light fixtures. That's
something everyone can see. Next time you're in a T station, compare
the light fixtures with what you'd see a "normal" commercial location
like a shopping mall. If you continue the shopping mall comparison
with other aspects of station design, you'll see many examples of what
I'm talking about. The DCR just "proudly" installed new fancy green
(i.e. expensive) guardrails on Storrow Drive. They've already been hit
and damaged. If they really wanted the road to look nice, just buy
inexpensive guard rail (light fixtures, etc.), but be meticulous about
maintaining it.
Please don't forget Mrs. DelValle who was killed when the glue holding
a concrete ceiling panel failed. It was subsequently determined that
no panels at all were ever needed in that part of the tunnel and
ultimately the panels and their fatally designed framework had to be
completely removed.
Elmer
Another quote form The Globe article:
http://www.boston.com/news/local/massachusetts/articles/2010/02/14/the_big_digs_deadly_safety_rails/?page=3
" A design using a cylindrical post handrail has been part of the
MassHighway design specifications for more than 40 years, according to
documents in the case file, and is used in the Sumner and Callahan
tunnels, for example. In New York, the Lincoln Tunnel uses a pipe-
style handrailing that starts about 4 feet off the road, said a
spokeswoman.
Big Dig managers could have used a rounded pipe design for handrails
in that system, too. In 1999, the manufacturer of the handrails tried
to convince the Massachusetts Turnpike and Bechtel/Parsons
Brinckerhoff, which managed the project, that rounded vertical
railings were the way to go.
Switching to the cylindrical pipe designs could have saved between
nearly $300,000 to more than $700,000, Tuttle, the railing
manufacturer, said in a 1999 memo. Officials at Modern agreed and
fought for the change, according to Big Dig documents in the suit.
But for reasons that are not clear in the court documents, officials
at Bechtel/Parsons Brinckerhoff did not agree. The original design,
with the edges, was used. "