How Would You Fix This Bridge?

/ How Would You Fix This Bridge? #1  

bdhsfz6

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Northeastern Pennsylvania
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The bridge was built in 1913 by dumping fill over a 6' diameter steel pipe, which is rotting away. The span over the pipe is around 20' to get to solid ground on either side. There is 36" of fill on top of the pipe, topped with 6" of modified gravel. Water is running beside the pipe and undermining what's left of it. As a result, the downstream side (left in pics 2 & 3), is subsiding. The aerial photo is north up orientation and the stream flow is top to bottom.

It's a private road, used by only a few property owners with limited resources. Contractor estimates to replace it with a 6' poly pipe are upward of $50K, which we can't afford. The price is elevated by DEP regulations which require the stream to be diverted during construction. The only way to do this is with large pumps. Stream flow and environmental impact studies prepared by a certified engineer are also required. Construction is made more difficult by overhead transmission lines.

The "cheap" fixes we've been looking at include using flatbed rail cars to span the pipe, or perhaps a 20' reinforced concrete slab. To avoid DEP regulations, anything we do can't disturb the stream.

Any ideas or suggestions would be greatly appreciated.

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/ How Would You Fix This Bridge? #2  
Dig in abutments ti then span with rail cars or a reinforced concrete slab for a bridge. That way, you're not disturbing the stream flow. You'll need the abutments to keep the stream from eroding the banks of whatever bridge style you decide on. Now the DEP knows there is an issue, they'll keep a watch on you. Good luck.
 
/ How Would You Fix This Bridge? #3  
Can you sleeve it with a 5' culvert pipe and grout the gap between the new culvert pipe and the old steel pipe?
 
/ How Would You Fix This Bridge? #4  
I assume this is a private drive? If you build a slab you need some kind of abutment to support it, maybe not with a rail car. I worked in the engineering world for nearly 40 years and stupid regulations can get ridiculous.
 
/ How Would You Fix This Bridge? #5  
Can you add pics looking through the culvert?
 
/ How Would You Fix This Bridge? #6  
The rail flat car would be nice, just set it on a couple of concrete slabs.
Or a pair of tractor trailer flat beds set side by side for a 16 ft wide bridge.
 
/ How Would You Fix This Bridge? #8  
That power line, do they occasionally access that line on your side of the creek. It crosses it but for how long? I'm guessing that your to the left in the overhead view.
(They might participate in this venture)
 
/ How Would You Fix This Bridge? #9  
Build a new box-type culvert beside the old one. When completed divert the creek to the new culvert. Box culverts have concrete wings and a concrete box(no bottom) for water flow. There is a box culvert in front of my house in the county road that's been there since the 1940's. I've watched fully-loaded tri-axle dump trucks drive over that culvert several times a day each spring and it's not been damaged yet.

A box culvert looks like a bridge and is often mistaken as such. This company builds pre-cast box culverts, but looking at them is a good visual aid to help understand how the look. Their design with a separate top is what I tried to describe, but turned upside down..
 
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