N.Y. Bridge Collapse Kills 1, Injures 10
MARCY, N.Y. — A pedestrian bridge under construction collapsed Thursday as concrete was being poured onto its steel girders, killing one worker and injuring 10 others, authorities said.
Three of the injured were in critical condition.
The workers were standing on the bridge when the girders crashed onto an unfinished highway 20 feet below, said Paul Obernesser, regional construction engineer for the state Transportation Department.
It took dozens of emergency workers about 45 minutes to free everyone from the debris.
The steel skeleton had been put in place over the summer and had passed safety inspections, Obernesser said.
“We’re trying to find out exactly what happened,” said Alice Romanych, an assistant to the regional director of the Transportation Department. “We want to make sure it never happens again.”
The Federal Highway Administration and U.S. Occupational Safety and Health Administration sent inspectors.
One of the injured was a Transportation Department employee. The rest, including the man who died, 46-year-old Scott Couchman, worked for the contractor, Tioga Construction, company officials said.
“Normally a deck pour is stressful in certain respects, but not from the standpoint of a bridge suddenly collapsing,” said Charles Sirowatka, a project engineer with the company.
The 170-foot-long, 12-foot-wide pedestrian bridge was being built over a new section of the Utica-Rome Expressway, a project that started in the late 1970s to link the two cities with a four-lane highway.
The $165-million project is expected to be completed in 2004. The pedestrian bridge was supposed to be finished this month.
Marcy is northwest of Utica in central New York state.
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