NEWS-Leafy-suburb-mainimg

USA

Leaf Pedestrian Bridge

Project description

The Leaf Pedestrian Bridge, in the City of Lone Tree, was built to reduce vehicle congestion on Lincoln Avenue by alleviating signal progression disruption and also provide a safer connection between popular destinations on both the north and south side of Lincoln Avenue for pedestrians and cyclists.

As the city continues to grow, it is increasingly important to provide alternative transportation routes for pedestrians who may live or work on one side, but want to take advantage of amenities that require them to cross Lincoln Ave.

The 170-foot-long bridge has a cable-stayed design and feature a 78-foot-tall leaf-shaped mast on its south end.

mageba scope

Considering all design requirements, and the benefit of making the bearings as small and unobtrusive as possible for aesthetic reasons, bearings of the RESTON-SPHERICAL type were selected for use.

The bearings at one end of the structure had to be designed to resist uplift forces in some circumstances, and all bearings are subject to substantial rotations.
The installed bearings are made almost entirely of steel, except for their sliding interfaces, which consist of stainless steel and ROBO-SLIDE, mageba’s far superior alternative to PTFE.

Since ROBO-SLIDE is not only many times more resistant to wear and abrasion than PTFE, but also able to resist much higher pressures, the RESTON-SPHERICAL bearing can resist very high pressures when loaded, resulting in a smaller bearing size than would arise with other bearing types.

NEWS-Leafy-suburb-Installation-of-bearing

Installation of a spherical bearing at Location B2

NEWS-Leafy-suburb-bearing-with-robo-slide

A guided sliding uplift type of spherical bearing at Location B1

Key Data

Products:

RESTON-SPHERICAL bearings

Feature:

ROBO-SLIDE sliding material

Installation:

2018

City:

Lone Tree, CO

Type:

Pedestrian bridge

Length:

52 m (170 feet)

Owner:

City of Lone Tree

Contractor:

Hamon Infrastructure

Architect:

Fentress Architects

Designer:

Thornton Tomasetti