No conspiracy talk please.

The ship had a catastrophic electrical power failure as it approached the bridge. Wind and tide caused a radical and uncontrolled change of course (see last two Suez canal accidents).

Key Bridge was very old and under constant repair every day for at least the last 30yrs.

It could not have been a better time for the worst to happen. Hour and a half before rush hour. Casualties should be light. Mostly from bridge repair crews.

I expect the last of the debris to cleared sometime between the middle of June and the middle of July this Summer.

Until then the old port at Sparrows Point could (and should) be brought back into at least temporary service. It would obviously not be an entire replacement for the terminals north of the bridge but would suffice in the short term and can be done in about a months time.

Rebuilding the bridge itself will probably take a minimum of 2yrs.

@Render watching that like "surly that bridge ain't gonna just collapse...." then BOOM

wtf

@Render Something similar happened in 1980 in Tampa Bay with the Sunshine Skyway Bridge.

structuremag.org/

@Render

It's not that old. 1977? The Michigan Avenue Bridge in Chicago started taking traffic in 1920. (No, I wasn't there when it opened ๐Ÿคฃ, but I grew up in Chicago) I am absolutely not any sort of architecture expert, but I wonder if this is a side benefit of a bascule bridge having to be made sturdy enough to withstand the winds when it's raised.

IAE, I'm sure you're right. It's awful, but easily could have been much worse.

@Render OMG this is just so awful. My biggest fear drowning in the ocean. I pray for all these people affected by this horrible horrible tragedy.

@Render It's just a really awful accident that was waiting to happen.

@Render

Thank you for this sober, rational & reasoned thought.

@Render

Unimaginable tragedy Iโ€™ve feared my entire life.

@Render Thank you for heading off the urge of some people to do conspiracy talk. Smart. I do not even want to see the chat on the dead bird site.

@Render Watching the video, I kept "pushing" the light traffic to hurry!

@Render

Honestly, my first thought was, "This is why we need to invest in infrastructure." But, while that's still true, this appears to just be a tragic, freak accident.

Even if the bridge was in better shape, it probably would have been taken out by the ship.

@Render My grandson was teasing me about that, pretending that he "heard..."

@Render
Iโ€™m sure when this bridge was originally designed and built. They never thought a ship that size with that weight and momentum would smash a column as hard as it did.

@thereg001

I suspect that it was at least a consideration.

Bethlehem Steel's old Sparrows Point steel mill and shipyard is at the north end of the bridge. They built cargo ships close to that size through two wars.

The aircraft carrier USS Coral Sea was scrapped in Baltimore Harbor and had to be towed under the Key bridge to get to the scrapping site.

Nothing is really designed to deal with 116 thousand tons hitting it at around 7 knots.

@Render @thereg001 TIL that when navigating in and out of complex/tight ports, specialized local pilots familiar with the port take over the navigation of the ships. This happened per protocol here. Such an unfortunate series of events with the ship itself. :/

@misslovelymess @thereg001

Yes, there were two harbor pilots onboard when the accident happened.

@Render Actual information from a decent source. Thank you.

@Render Thatโ€™s horrendous ๐Ÿ˜ฒ
I feel so bad for all those unsuspecting people ๐Ÿ˜ช

@Render @Knitpurrl
Un.be.lievable. ๐Ÿ˜ณ๐Ÿ˜ณ๐Ÿ˜ณ๐Ÿคฏ๐Ÿ˜”๐Ÿ˜Ÿ

@Render

I feel like I'm watching the video of the Hindenburg.

Right before the bridge fell, there didn't seem to be as much traffic. This video is 2x speed, so the duration is longer than it appears

I am wondering if there was some sort of warning alarm that halted traffic from crossing immediately after impact.b

@Render

OMG - watching those cars drive over the bridge and get to safety right before the bridge collapsed was a near thing.

@evamarie @Render

Nature woke me up in the middle of the night & I made the mistake of looking at my phone. Seeing the video of the bridge collapse shook me to the bone. Getting back to sleep was near-impossible.

All my life, I have feared being on a bridge that collapses. Living in MI, driving the Mackinac Bridge terrified me (5 miles).

My heart is with the families who lost loved ones. Their last moments must have been utterly terrifying ๐Ÿ’”

@LnzyHou @Render

My heart goes out to the loved ones, too. Render was right though: it could have been so much worse.

@LnzyHou @evamarie @Render i hear you. there was a portion of the bay bridge that collapsed and its always made me uneasy, too.

@Render that was crazy to watch, wasn't it?

It looks like the ship's power went out twice before it hit so it seems like a terrible accident.

@Lindy @Render

No X/Twitter for me either. Maybe a screenshot of the most relevant part? Short summary of what it's about?

@Render nothing like a well placed cialis ad for consideration of this tragic event.
Thank you for the link.
No thanks to twitter for the management.

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