Bridge for Kids

Bridge in Orting, Washington From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Bridge for Kids is a proposed bridge across the Carbon River in Orting, Washington, about one mile (1.6 km) upstream of where it joins the Puyallup River. It would provide an emergency evacuation route for school children to escape a future lahar flow from Mount Rainier, consisting of an up to 10-meter-high (33 ft) flood of mud, rock and boulders.[1][2] As of 2016, the $40 million bridge was still in the planning phase.[2]

Coordinates47°06′35″N 122°12′49″W
LocaleRocky Road NE, Orting, Washington
Official nameOrting Emergency Evacuation Bridge
Quick facts Coordinates, Crosses ...
Bridge for Kids
Coordinates47°06′35″N 122°12′49″W
CrossesCarbon River
LocaleRocky Road NE, Orting, Washington
Official nameOrting Emergency Evacuation Bridge
Characteristics
DesignSuspension bridge with uneven footings
Total length540 feet (160 m)
Width20–30 feet (6.1–9.1 m)
Clearance below18.5 feet (5.6 m)
Location
Interactive map of Bridge for Kids
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Background

Hazard map of Mount Rainier
  Electron Mudflow-sized event (generally large in size)
  National Lahar-sized event (generally moderate in size)
  Lahars not necessarily associated to volcanism (generally small)
  Flooding after lahar event
  Potential area of inundation from failure of the Alder Dam
  County boundary
  City
Steel highway bridge embedded in lahar from 1980 eruption of Mount St. Helens

Lahars from the Cascade Volcanoes are historically common.[3][4] Orting is situated in the floodplain of the Puyallup River and on top of the debris field of past lahars from Mount Rainier,[5] including the Osceola Mudflow. The Osceola Mudflow followed an eruption 5,600 years ago that left a horseshoe-shaped crater in Mount Rainier comparable to that of the 1980 eruption of Mount Saint Helens and deposited debris across a 212-square-mile (550 km2) area as far as Commencement Bay on Puget Sound.[3] Another event, the Electron Mudflow, produced a lahar that was 30 meters (98 ft) deep when it reached the Puget Sound lowland.[3]

The current lahar risk is considered extremely high in Orting,[6] with an estimated one in seven chance of a catastrophic event in a resident's lifetime.[1] Land use planning and emergency management in Orting differs from that in surrounding Pierce County, allowing development and location of schools in this area.[5]

The Mount Rainier Volcano Lahar Warning System has existed since 2000 to give residents in high-risk areas some advance warning of an approaching lahar, but evacuation drills in Orting have shown that motorized transportation (school buses) is not a viable option for removing students from the lahar zone due to road congestion and time factors.[7]

Evacuation planning at Orting schools started in 1995, and it was then that the insufficiency of infrastructure began to be an issue.[1] As of 2016, drills were showing student evacuation times via an existing 2-mile (3.2 km) foot route to still be in excess of the notification window.[2]

Bridge design

A yearlong design process was started by Pierce County in consultation with Washington State Department of Transportation and other agencies and a citizens' group in January, 2009, after considering other evacuation means such as pathways and a tunnel under the river.[8] The bridge would be 20–30 feet (6.1–9.1 m) wide and accommodate 12,000 people in 30 minutes. Orting is estimated to have a 40 minute evacuation window after the Mount Rainier Volcano Lahar Warning System is activated.[7]

Preliminary design renderings from 2014 show a pedestrian suspension bridge with stairsteps approaching a lower pier, and another pier 150 feet (46 m) higher on a ridge above Orting, near the community of Tehaleh.[2][9][10] Part of the bridge deck would contain stairs and lie at a 40% slope.[10]

See also

References

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