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Thread: Doublewide vs Bridge
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07-05-2011, 06:17 AM #1
Doublewide vs Bridge
Does anyone know the weight limit for this bridge?
I am guessing it is less than the weight of a doublewide.
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Bruce Breedlove
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07-05-2011, 08:54 AM #2
Re: Doublewide vs Bridge
I have never seen a double-wide with an attached garage.
That must have been the worst feeling. "oh, man"
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Supreme Emperor of Hyperbole
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07-05-2011, 10:05 AM #3
Re: Doublewide vs Bridge
If they can get a CO it would be a great location. Sound of running water to lull you to sleep at night and fresh caught trout for breakfast.
The beatings will continue until morale has improved. mgt.
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07-05-2011, 10:43 AM #4
Re: Doublewide vs Bridge
Wow. It would be interesting to know the outcome/methods used to get that house over the river.
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07-05-2011, 11:32 AM #5
Re: Doublewide vs Bridge
This is a four-years-old RTM incident, not a "double-wide", and was in Alberta, CN.
The pilings were rotted away at waterline, even if bridge had been designed to handle weight and movement at 4 kMpH - it was not maintained or able to perform at design with rotted pilings.
The permited approval of the route was initially issued in error by the District's authority (an outsourced privatized contractor).
Permits and authorities work differently in Canada. The whole debacle was a CF of communications failures for a end-of-week permit issued and a beginning-of-week structure move.; and not verifying and controlling the move, (safety managment) by the SM.
If anything its another agrument against outsourcing government functions to private for-profit companies; a reminder that reliance on government or its contractors for safety responsibility, liability or enforcement, is at one's own peril; there is no substitute for common sense; and stupid is as stupid does (borrowing from Forest Gump's mother). Check, double check, and triple check. On that same note, thousands if not more operations still in the country on the wrong part of the body - because nobody "takes a moment" and triple checks before the operation begins. Ultimately the SM's resp.).
You may read (and see much more interesting pictures) more here: http://www.iasm.org/magazine/dec2007/10p.pdf
This was poorly covered in the news, keeps showing up in emails, blogs, etc.; and was better covered by the trade. See International Association of Structural Mover's (IASM) magazine "Structural Mover" December 2007. The clickable link above will provide access to the first part of the article & more photographs.
Last edited by H.G. Watson, Sr.; 07-05-2011 at 11:46 AM.
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07-05-2011, 02:02 PM #6
Re: Doublewide vs Bridge
It looks like it needed a few more wheels on the ground. Looks like it has a well built chassis though.
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07-05-2011, 03:02 PM #7
Re: Doublewide vs Bridge
A little structural work on that home and it could be a covered bridge.
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07-05-2011, 09:05 PM #8
Re: Doublewide vs Bridge
Reminds me of a Frank Lloyd Wright design.
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07-06-2011, 09:01 AM #9
Re: Doublewide vs Bridge
Thanks, HG for the background info.
It is not a double wide mobile home. If it was, it would have been split in half for the move.
The house movers supplied the frame and wheels and I'm sure they calculated the weight per axle and would have been fine if the bridge had been up to snuff.
The driver's first reaction could have been "Ouch, my poor truck!". And it would make a fine covered bridge, but they would need a permit to park it there. I'm sure it was a real headache for a few days before they got it rolling again.
John Kogel, RHI, BC HI Lic #47455
www.allsafehome.ca
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