The Lully Viaduct, A Composite Bridge With Steel Tube Truss
The Lully Viaduct, A Composite Bridge With Steel Tube Truss
The Lully Viaduct, A Composite Bridge With Steel Tube Truss
ABSTRACT
The innovative design of the Lully viaduct proposes a light and transparent structure made of a triangular
cross-section fabricated entirely from unstiffened circular tubes. The result is twin space trusses, with a typical
span of 42.75 m. Each transversal triangular cross-section is 2.9 m high and 4.0 m wide, and is supported by a
single slender pier. The largest diameters and thickness of the tubes are over 500 mm and nearly 70 mm
respectively. One major difficulty during the design of the connections was to define the stress distribution
along the complex intersecting perimeters of the tubes, and to calculate the hot spot stresses. Geometry
calculations, precision cutting and edge preparation of the tubes were necessary for performing full
penetration welds. The mobile formwork, which also ensures the stability of the tubular trusses during
concrete pouring, also required special consideration.
This paper describes the evolution of the project, from design, truss fabrication and welding, to construction
on site.
KEYWORDS
Aesthetic, bridge, composite bridge, space truss, circular hollow tubes, fatigue, stress distribution, stress
concentration factor, hot spot stress, weld.
INTRODUCTION
Located on the Swiss highway A1, the 1000 m long Lully viaduct, made of space tubular trusses, is the result
of an engineer design contest. This project was chosen by the jury for its originality and aesthetic quality. In
the past, no one dared to build a road bridge with welded tubular nodes due to the dynamic stress.
DESIGN CONTEST
Located near the village of Lully in the Canton of Fribourg, the viaduct is incorporated into highway A1
running from the East to West of Switzerland. Crossing a rural flat valley surrounded by wet land and trees,
this bridge will complete a highway link between Murten and Yverdon. The owner, the Fribourg Cantonal
Highway Office, had to choose between 3 projects submitted by selected experienced consulting firms.
The partcipants had to respect the following conditions:
Total bridge length : approximately 1'000 m
Width of the bridge deck : from 13.25 m to 16.00 m in each traffic direction
For maintenance reasons, it was decided to build two separate roadways
Longitudinal inclination : between 2.9 and 3.6 % in a concave circular arc with a radius of 40'000 m
Horizontal curve : circle of 3'000 m between 2 transition radius
Height over the valley : between 4 and 15 m.
The following projects were submitted to the 5 members of the jury :
One prestressed concrete box girder with an average span of 44.60 m and a constant depth of 2.50 m.
One prestressed concrete box girder with an average span of 42.50 m. This girder depth varied between 2
and 2.45 m.
One composite space truss with an average span of 42.75 m and a constant height of 3.75 m.
The third project was recommended by the jury for its lightness and transparency allowing it to integrate
into the countryside (Fig 1). The recommendation was approved by the responsible authority who accepted
the challenge of innovative design. This project was presented by the consulting engineers group DIC-DMA
(Dauner Ingnieurs Conseils SA and Devaud, Mongatti et Associes SA).
CONCEPTUAL DESIGN
The shape of the surrounding trees inspired the author for the conceptual design [1]. A certain analogy can be
made with the steel construction where the elements size can be easily changed and adapted to live load
capacity [2].
Three different cross sections were considered :
Fig. 2
The first alternative was the ideal design (Fig.2). It has slim cylindrical piers without bracing, but did not
respect the maintenance condition of two separated roadways. The third solution has been design to avoid
having piers dominating the surrounding trees. This included perpendicular truss connecting the two
longitudinal girders at the cross section on the piers. The result was a three-dimensional tubular truss
supporting structure.
PROJECT DESCRIPTION
Geometry
The dimensions of the trusses were based on equilateral triangles. Compared to a traditional box girder, the
truss depth is 50% higher. The slenderness (L/H) of this lightweight superstructure is approximately 13
instead of 20 as for regular beam girder (Fig 3).
1. Nodal forces had to be equilibrated without taking the concrete resistance into account. Overlapping of the
diagonals was therefore chosen in order to transfer some of the vertical force directly between the
diagonals.
2. The tube diameter had to be large enough to provide adequate space for the welded shear connectors and
to allow minimum concrete cover.
Fig 6 and 7
The deck width varied between 12.0 and 14.65 m. In order to limit the long-term deflection of the relatively
wide cantilever wings (4.0 to 5.33 m) and to minimize the weight of the deck, transversal tendons (600 mm2)
were used. The concrete deck was prestressed longitudinally with the same type of tendons. Longitudinally
the prestressing force has been chosen to insure compression in every section under dead load (concrete and
road surface).
Design
The bridge was designed according to the Swiss standard SIA 160.
Two different structural models were used for the calculation of the space truss:
1. Hinged diagonals with continuous chords for structural safety design
2. Rigid nodes for fatigue and serviceability design
The bridge deck had to be converted into a plane grid model (Vierendeel), made of two longitudinal chord
and vertical members placed at the intersection with the diagonals of the space truss (Fig 8).
Fig 8
Space truss model for static analysis during erection and final stage
Equivalent displacement theory was used in order to determine the stiffness of the longitudinal chord. Deck
stiffness, composite effect with upper chord and Saint-Venant torque resistance were considered in the
vertical member properties.
Joints
The structural safety of the members and joints was verified with the internal forces of the hinged model
(discussed in [3]).
No standard recommendations could be found to check fatigue resistance, or an empirical method for
computing local stresses at the circular hollow tube intersection, nor a fatigue category considering the
backing shell.
The following criteria were adopted after discussion with the owner and the expert engineers
1. Fatigue load according to SIA 160
2. Calculations of internal forces with
full and cracked composite section (with n = Esteel/Econcrete = 10)
rigid nodes
Fatigue
Fatigue effects are very important for this spatial tubular structure, especially at the welded joints. The
comparison between stress range and fatigue resistance is given by the well known formula :
E = fat
where
s fat
s R
:
:
:
:
R
fat
The problem specific to this bridge lays in the determination of the local stress range at the joints under traffic
load. It involves complicated analyses taking into consideration :
the geometry of the connection
the diameters of the elements
the width of the tube
All these factors are included in a "Stress Concentration Factor" (SCF), which multiplies the nominal stress s N
in the diagonal. It attempts to include both global geometrical stress concentration as well as the local stress
concentration associated with the weld.
fat = SCF N
with
s N = N/A
The stress concentration factor compares the hot spot stress at a joint with the nominal stress in the diagonal.
The SCF is the ratio of the local stress at the weld toe to the nominal stress in the brace.
SCF =
with
sN
s HS
SCF
HS
N
: Nominal stress
: Hot spot stress
: Stress concentration factor
Empirical formulas
Equations for the distribution of SCF around the intersection of tubular K joint can be found in [7], Fig 9.
In the diagonal
0,157
SCFK = 0,920 -0,441
t 0,560 0,058 e1,448 sin
with
d
D
D
2T
t
T
g
D
No equations currently exist for stress distribution in KK joints [4]. For this type of connection the stress
concentration factor is higher and a corrected factor ? was applied to the K-joints stress concentration factor.
SCFKK = ? SCFK
with
Type of
joint
Element
Diagonal
K
Chord
Diagonal
KK
Chord
Fig 10.
Type of
joint
SCF
empirical
SCF
FEA model
(%)
3,3
2,9
2,6
2,0
4,5
4,2
3,9
3,4
3,1
2,8
2,0
1,9
3,4
3,2
1,6
1,6
6%
4%
30 %
5%
1.10
1.14
0.80
0.84
Element
Diagonal
K
Chord
Fig 10a
Solicitation
+ Tension
Compression
Solicitation
+ Tension
Compression
SCF
empirical
SCF
FEA model
(%)
3,3
2,9
2,6
2,0
3,1
2,8
2,0
1,9
-6 %
-4 %
-30 %
-5 %
Comparison between SCF empirical and FEA model for circular hollow sections and K joint
Type of
joint
Element
Diagonal
KK
Chord
Fig 10b
Solicitation
+ Tension
Compression
SCF
FEA model
K
3.1
2.8
2.0
1.9
SCF
FEA model
KK
3,4
3,2
1,6
1,6
?
FEA
1.10
1.14
0.80
0.84
Fabrication
The heart and soul of this bridge lay in the cutting edge diagonal facilities (Fig 11). The fabrication would
not have been possible without this equipment which cuts tubes lengthwise and prepares contact and welding
surfaces (Fig 12).
Fig 11.
Fig 12.
The truss was assembled on a frame enabling each segment length to be adapted according to the complex
geometry, taking into account the camber, the horizontal transition radius and the vertical circle. Two
adjacent sections could be preassembled on this frame. Diagonals joints were then welded manually and the
position of the entire section could be adapted to suit the welding conditions.
On site construction
Every pier stands on 4 bored piles at depths of 12 to 20 m. After the completion of the western abutment and
of 8 piers, the erection of the steel space truss could take place. The truss was assembled with crane trucks
from ground level. The truss sections weighted between 25 and 35 tons. These were delivered on low bed
trucks in lengths of 19 and 24 m. The building speed was of one full span every 2 weeks.
After positioning the truss up to the seventh pier, the mobile formwork was installed at the western abutment.
Every stage was half a span long and took one week. The form and reinforcement placement added to the
concrete pumping and hardening was moving at the same speed as the truss erection. The prestress of the
transversal and longitudinal tendons was applied just after the form removal.
The Lully viaduct using triangular tube-truss is a novelty in road bridge construction (Fig 13). Special thanks
are due to all the companies who were involved for their contribution to this high quality bridge. No major
problem occurred during the construction and some valuable experiences were gathered in tube truss
assembly and construction of variable width deck. The analysis of stress measurement will be beneficial to the
knowledge of the fatigue strength of KK shaped joint. Combined with new research in fatigue, it will certainly
promote the use of tubes for road bridge structure. Let us hope that enough financial resources will be found
in order to enable a real breakthrough in modern bridge construction.
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