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Recommended for: Grades 3-12

Resource: The Bridge Challenge

Media Type:
HTML Interactive

Size: 565.0 KB

Only after first considering such factors as site (location and conditions), purpose, and, of course, budget can an engineer decide the most appropriate size, shape, and building material for a bridge. This interactive activity from the Building Big Web site challenges users to identify which bridge design is best for each of four different locations in the growing fictional community of Craggy Rock.
 

Teachers' Domain, The Bridge Challenge, published January 22, 2004, retrieved on ,
http://www.teachersdomain.org/resource/phy03.sci.phys.mfw.bbbridgechal/

An engineer's masterful grasp of physics, the properties and availability of various building materials, and construction techniques has made it possible to build modern bridges that carry heavier loads, span greater distances, and use less material than ever before. In determining which of the three basic bridge designs to use when building a bridge, an engineer must consider, among other things, the length of the span, the surrounding terrain, the bridge's intended use, and the cost of materials and labor.

Beam bridges, the simplest and most cost-effective kind of span, consist of beams made of wood, iron, or steel -- the stiffer, the better -- laid horizontally atop evenly spaced supports called piers. Although single-beam bridges rarely span longer than 200 feet, bridges made by joining several beams can run almost endlessly. Stiffening trusses may be added to help the bridge support heavier loads.

Arch bridges, typically steel or stone structures, are easily identified by their graceful, curved shape. Capable of spanning longer distances -- 200 to 800 feet -- without the use of intermediate support piers, these compressive structures can be built high over deep rivers or gorges. Fixed supports, called abutments, at each end of an arch prevent it from spreading apart at its base.

A suspension bridge's signature features -- its long steel cables and rising towers -- support the weight of a suspended deck and the traffic it's designed to carry. The cables are anchored at each end of the bridge into solid concrete blocks, which pull on the suspension cables and keep them taut. Capable of spanning more than a mile, suspension bridges are often used over large bodies of water, like harbor entrances. Because suspension bridges typically have only two foundational piers, on top of which the towers stand, obstacles to shipping activity passing below the deck are minimized.
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Source: Building Big Web site

This resource can be found on the Building Big Web site.

Resource Produced by:

WGBH Educational Foundation

Collection Developed by:

WGBH Educational Foundation

Collection Credits

Collection Funded by:

National Science Foundation