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Unread 26-08-2009, 18:11   #13
ThomasJ
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Location: Clonsilla
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From Breaking News


Quote:

Collapsed rail bridge faced October inspection

A railway viaduct which collapsed into the sea was due to undergo a full bridge inspection in October, it emerged tonight.

Iarnród Éireann revealed the Malahide estuary crossing was scheduled to have its biennial assessment this autumn.

However the firm confirmed engineer divers only examine underwater structures every six years and the Broadmeadow Estuary Rail viaduct was not expected to be seen again until 2012.

A 20 metre section of the bridge, which carries more than 90 trains a day, fell into the sea on Friday moments after rush hour commuter services carrying hundreds of passengers passed over it.

Train driver Keith Farrelly averted tragedy when he spotted subsidence on the track and all services were suspended.

Iarnród Éireann confirmed a member of the public raised concerns at markings on piers on the Malahide Viaduct and over erosion to the piers four days before the incident.

Spokesman Barry Kenny maintained the firm responded promptly to the call from sea scout leader Ivan Barratt by having an engineer inspect the viaduct and its piers the following day.

“This assessment identified that there were no visible structural issues, and that all markings were cosmetic,” said Mr Kenny.

“We are satisfied that this is accurate, and that the markings identified were unrelated to Friday’s collapse.”

Mr Kenny said a track recording vehicle which travelled the line on Thursday - the day before the collapse – did not detect any deviations in the line either.

However Mr Barratt, who takes scouts canoeing up to three times a week on the estuary, claims he had noticed worsening erosion over a period of several months.

An initial Iarnród Éireann inquiry has found seabed erosion, caused by recent low tides and heavy rains, is suspected of being behind the collapse of the busy railway viaduct.

“It is believed that in a relatively short time-frame, possibly in recent weeks, that a small breach occurred in a causeway plateau within the seabed. This would have resulted in changes to water flow, with increased water pressure on the area,” added Mr Kenny.

Inspection and maintenance reports and procedures and climate factors will all be examined by Iarnród Éireann as part of its ongoing probe, he added.

Fine Gael said it was unacceptable an underwater examination of the railway infrastructure and surrounding seabed was not carried out when the concerns were highlighted.

Fergus O’Dowd TD called on Iarnród Éireann to publish its safety management system which was in place to monitor the Malahide estuary railway infrastructure.

“The public also needs to know how quickly normal service can be resumed,” he added.

Labour’s Tommy Broughan said the Department of Transport’s Rail Investigation Unit should also fully investigate the sequence of events including the phonecall made by a concerned member of the public.

“The reported warnings prior to the bridge’s collapse from a senior Malahide Sea Scout leader raise profound questions over the safety and inspection procedures that are currently in place at Irish Rail,” he added.

Elsewhere a special group has been set up to help minimise the disruption caused by the cancellation of rail services to deal with extra vehicles on the road and assist public transport providers.
There is a programme I enjoy watching "air crash investigation". In one of the episodes, where volcanic ash got into the engine all of the other engines as well also stopped. One of the implementations from this incident was that the aviation industry and geologists work together to ensure they are aware of the threat if it happens.

In my opinion, the people who are out there every day are more experts than these engineer divers because they see this area day in day out, not every 6 years! Thats why they spotted this problem and not IE days ago. If anything can be learned from this is that these people should be communicated with and they can show where the problem lies. By IE working with the local groups who use this stretch they may forsee this problem in future and deal with it promptly.

By doing a proper check they would have still cause untold chaos with the northern line but at least they wouldn't have had everyone from the government down questioning how they maintain their infrastructure. Fact is we have untold chaos and everywhere you look in the media you see that mess of a bridge!

Hopefully they will also examine how to sort this bridge out not just rebuilt and strengthen it. Maybe its time to have a look at how other countries deal with this problem.

Last edited by ThomasJ : 27-08-2009 at 10:02.
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