Baltimore Bay bridge collapses
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@Aqua-Letifer said in Baltimore Bay bridge collapses:
From my visit to Baltimore, I recall the "Domino Sugars" sign but not the bridge. It's not until I see the "Domino" sign that it occurs to me, "wait, I have been there."
@Axtremus said in Baltimore Bay bridge collapses:
@Aqua-Letifer said in Baltimore Bay bridge collapses:
From my visit to Baltimore, I recall the "Domino Sugars" sign but not the bridge. It's not until I see the "Domino" sign that it occurs to me, "wait, I have been there."
Yeah, and the best time to see it is at the same time of day this photo was taken.
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This will also push more travelers onto the Acela and NE Express, possibly to capacity, which will create new challenges. The months that the port is down will add major stressors to a supply chain that is still recovering from 20-21. And that port was the last floater keeping that city from being completely flushed.
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This will also push more travelers onto the Acela and NE Express, possibly to capacity, which will create new challenges. The months that the port is down will add major stressors to a supply chain that is still recovering from 20-21. And that port was the last floater keeping that city from being completely flushed.
@LuFins-Dad said in Baltimore Bay bridge collapses:
This will also push more travelers onto the Acela and NE Express, possibly to capacity, which will create new challenges. The months that the port is down will add major stressors to a supply chain that is still recovering from 20-21. And that port was the last floater keeping that city from being completely flushed.
Is it a city that should be flushed?
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Yeah the traffic this summer will be extra sux0rs. Tunnel traffic jams, tons of traffic taking 95 or 695 alternate routes adding time and distance.
Other things I’ve thought of. Cruise ships, any stuck, but otherwise lots will have to change their port. Same with normal cargo ships, any stuck?
Then I think of the businesses along the highway route that’ll now have nearly zero customers. Sucks.
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@LuFins-Dad said in Baltimore Bay bridge collapses:
This will also push more travelers onto the Acela and NE Express, possibly to capacity, which will create new challenges. The months that the port is down will add major stressors to a supply chain that is still recovering from 20-21. And that port was the last floater keeping that city from being completely flushed.
Is it a city that should be flushed?
@Jolly said in Baltimore Bay bridge collapses:
@LuFins-Dad said in Baltimore Bay bridge collapses:
This will also push more travelers onto the Acela and NE Express, possibly to capacity, which will create new challenges. The months that the port is down will add major stressors to a supply chain that is still recovering from 20-21. And that port was the last floater keeping that city from being completely flushed.
Is it a city that should be flushed?
Not really. But I am biased. I have grandparents and cousins who live there and have been involved in everything from the Inner Habor revitalization in the 90s to opening up small coffee shops and renovating houses for the poor. The city has a rich history and unique culture. Of course there are wide swaths of the city that are ghetto as shit and could use a complete reset.
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Time to re-build?
Ten years:
A complete rebuild could take a decade or more, Schafer said. He noted that building the original bridge took five years and rebuilding the Skyway Bridge in Tampa after it was hit by a freighter in 1980 took seven.
“To actually recreate that whole transportation network," he said. "Projects that large take “rarely less than 10 years."
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Seems to me, the biggest need is to get the shipping lanes open. The rest is congestion and inconvenience, compared with the economic impact of the port being closed.
I understand the Corps of Engineers has been tasked with opening the shipping channel back up.
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Seems to me, the biggest need is to get the shipping lanes open. The rest is congestion and inconvenience, compared with the economic impact of the port being closed.
I understand the Corps of Engineers has been tasked with opening the shipping channel back up.
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Seems to me, the biggest need is to get the shipping lanes open. The rest is congestion and inconvenience, compared with the economic impact of the port being closed.
I understand the Corps of Engineers has been tasked with opening the shipping channel back up.
@Jolly said in Baltimore Bay bridge collapses:
Seems to me, the biggest need is to get the shipping lanes open. The rest is congestion and inconvenience, compared with the economic impact of the port being closed.
I understand the Corps of Engineers has been tasked with opening the shipping channel back up.
Agreed about the priority.
BTW the empire state building took 13 months.
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@Jolly said in Baltimore Bay bridge collapses:
Seems to me, the biggest need is to get the shipping lanes open. The rest is congestion and inconvenience, compared with the economic impact of the port being closed.
I understand the Corps of Engineers has been tasked with opening the shipping channel back up.
Agreed about the priority.
BTW the empire state building took 13 months.
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If building the original took 5 years in the 70’s, why would it take 7-10 now? Oh, that’s right, unions…
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If building the original took 5 years in the 70’s, why would it take 7-10 now? Oh, that’s right, unions…
@LuFins-Dad said in Baltimore Bay bridge collapses:
If building the original took 5 years in the 70’s, why would it take 7-10 now? Oh, that’s right, unions…
If the union safety regulations save even a single life, the extra time is worth it.
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@LuFins-Dad said in Baltimore Bay bridge collapses:
If building the original took 5 years in the 70’s, why would it take 7-10 now? Oh, that’s right, unions…
If the union safety regulations save even a single life, the extra time is worth it.
@Horace said in Baltimore Bay bridge collapses:
@LuFins-Dad said in Baltimore Bay bridge collapses:
If building the original took 5 years in the 70’s, why would it take 7-10 now? Oh, that’s right, unions…
If the union safety regulations save even a single life, the extra time is worth it.
Who said safety regulations?
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@Horace said in Baltimore Bay bridge collapses:
@LuFins-Dad said in Baltimore Bay bridge collapses:
If building the original took 5 years in the 70’s, why would it take 7-10 now? Oh, that’s right, unions…
If the union safety regulations save even a single life, the extra time is worth it.
Who said safety regulations?
@LuFins-Dad said in Baltimore Bay bridge collapses:
@Horace said in Baltimore Bay bridge collapses:
@LuFins-Dad said in Baltimore Bay bridge collapses:
If building the original took 5 years in the 70’s, why would it take 7-10 now? Oh, that’s right, unions…
If the union safety regulations save even a single life, the extra time is worth it.
Who said safety regulations?
The voice in my head that told me what a union apologist would say in response to your post.