What, no standing ovation???
:lol:
HA! If I could only find an animated .gif.....
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What, no standing ovation???
:lol:
What, no standing ovation???
:lol:
Little full of ourselves are we?:razz:
I'd be curious to read what they used to catch the debris. With VT being a fairly environmentally friendly state, I wouldn't think they'd just blow it up and let the debris sink to the bottom.
According to what I've read, yup. And then they're going to gather it up off the bottom before April. Being so old, I'd figure there wasn't much that was "dangerous" there, just metal and concrete....neither of which are likely to be rare on the bottom of a lake.
Before April?
Does the lake freeze in this area? I know the deepest parts of the lake don't freeze all that often, but I don't know where this bridge is.
-w
yes, it does freeze in that area. The only part of the lake that rarely freezes is the widest part off the coast of Burlington.
Isn't that going to make getting the debris out prior to April rather difficult?
-w
One would think.
I'm actually surprised they demolished it. I would've figured they would've left it up as a walking bridge, re-routed the road and put up a new bridge beside it. That was what they did on route 16 going over the Piscataqua in Newington, NH. Also what they did more recently over the Penobscot Narrows in Maine.
It's amazing how quickly it went from carrying traffic to being gone. If it was deteriorated so badly that they were afraid it would collapse on it's own you'd think it would have been closed a long time ago.
The dude who came on just after the woman in the video sounded like a tool...
When I lived in VT, VPR had tons of stories about how the state's bridges were mostly in various states of disrepair. Those were always scary news casts to listen to as I usually heard them in my car while driving over some of those same bridges.It's amazing how quickly it went from carrying traffic to being gone. If it was deteriorated so badly that they were afraid it would collapse on it's own you'd think it would have been closed a long time ago.
When I lived in VT, VPR had tons of stories about how the state's bridges were mostly in various states of disrepair. Those were always scary news casts to listen to as I usually heard them in my car while driving over some of those same bridges.
Unfortunately, this is not unique to Vermont and we saw that huge bridge failure out in MN a year or two ago. Lots of bridges were built at the same time as our highways were built up and that infrastructure is reaching the need of serious repair or retirement.... at a time when budgets are tighter than ever and increasing taxes is political and suicide.
One would think.
I'm actually surprised they demolished it. I would've figured they would've left it up as a walking bridge, re-routed the road and put up a new bridge beside it. That was what they did on route 16 going over the Piscataqua in Newington, NH. Also what they did more recently over the Penobscot Narrows in Maine.
Unfortunately, this is not unique to Vermont and we saw that huge bridge failure out in MN a year or two ago. Lots of bridges were built at the same time as our highways were built up and that infrastructure is reaching the need of serious repair or retirement.... at a time when budgets are tighter than ever and increasing taxes is political and suicide.