Get 20M+ Full-Text Papers For Less Than $1.50/day. Start a 14-Day Trial for You or Your Team.

Learn More →

Bridge inspection practices and bridge management programs in China, Japan, Korea, and U.S.

Bridge inspection practices and bridge management programs in China, Japan, Korea, and U.S. AbstractThe present study reviews bridge inspection practices and bridge management programs in China, Japan, Korea, and U.S. Bridges play an essential role in transportation systems and in the economic production process. Transportation agencies should maintain bridges in acceptable conditions to provide a desirable level of service to the public within limited budgets. In addition, a number of bridges are aging rapidly in these four countries. Fortunately, since several countries have experienced deteriorated bridges due to aging, the countries considered in this study have already developed comprehensive bridge management system (BMS) and bridge inspection practices. Therefore, the goal of this paper is to search for and synthesize useful knowledge on BMSs and bridge inspection practices of the four countries. Finally, recommendations that will serve as guidance to transportation agencies for potential enhancements to BMS and bridge inspections are presented. http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png Journal of Structural Integrity and Maintenance Taylor & Francis

Bridge inspection practices and bridge management programs in China, Japan, Korea, and U.S.

Bridge inspection practices and bridge management programs in China, Japan, Korea, and U.S.

Journal of Structural Integrity and Maintenance , Volume 3 (2): 10 – Apr 3, 2018

Abstract

AbstractThe present study reviews bridge inspection practices and bridge management programs in China, Japan, Korea, and U.S. Bridges play an essential role in transportation systems and in the economic production process. Transportation agencies should maintain bridges in acceptable conditions to provide a desirable level of service to the public within limited budgets. In addition, a number of bridges are aging rapidly in these four countries. Fortunately, since several countries have experienced deteriorated bridges due to aging, the countries considered in this study have already developed comprehensive bridge management system (BMS) and bridge inspection practices. Therefore, the goal of this paper is to search for and synthesize useful knowledge on BMSs and bridge inspection practices of the four countries. Finally, recommendations that will serve as guidance to transportation agencies for potential enhancements to BMS and bridge inspections are presented.

Loading next page...
 
/lp/taylor-francis/bridge-inspection-practices-and-bridge-management-programs-in-china-0tN94wKfY7

References (31)

Publisher
Taylor & Francis
Copyright
© 2018 Korea Institute for Structural Maintenance and Inspection
ISSN
2470-5322
eISSN
2470-5314
DOI
10.1080/24705314.2018.1461548
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

AbstractThe present study reviews bridge inspection practices and bridge management programs in China, Japan, Korea, and U.S. Bridges play an essential role in transportation systems and in the economic production process. Transportation agencies should maintain bridges in acceptable conditions to provide a desirable level of service to the public within limited budgets. In addition, a number of bridges are aging rapidly in these four countries. Fortunately, since several countries have experienced deteriorated bridges due to aging, the countries considered in this study have already developed comprehensive bridge management system (BMS) and bridge inspection practices. Therefore, the goal of this paper is to search for and synthesize useful knowledge on BMSs and bridge inspection practices of the four countries. Finally, recommendations that will serve as guidance to transportation agencies for potential enhancements to BMS and bridge inspections are presented.

Journal

Journal of Structural Integrity and MaintenanceTaylor & Francis

Published: Apr 3, 2018

Keywords: Bridge; maintenance; inspection; serviceability; management

There are no references for this article.