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  • 00:00

    We are back in Florida for this weeks video, scarily it seems the state has had more than

  • 00:05

    its fair share of disasters.

  • 00:08

    It is the 20th April 1987, and a new 4 lane bridge across the Tampa bay is being opened

  • 00:15

    to the public.

  • 00:16

    It is a welcome relief to commuters, it represents a doubling of capacity for traffic, but this

  • 00:22

    is only reinstating a previously achieved throughput.

  • 00:26

    For the last 7 years motorists have been squeezing along a two lane bridge, originally built

  • 00:33

    in 1954 it is a little bit of a bottle neck.

  • 00:37

    But a new bridge wasn’t the original plan, up until 1980 the crossing had 4 lanes, but

  • 00:44

    a series of events would result in a partial collapse of a vital bridge in the region.

  • 00:49

    The bridge is called the sunshine skyway, but a day in may 1980 would prove to be not

  • 00:57

    so sunny.

  • 00:58

    My name is John and today we will be looking at the sunshine skyway collapse.

  • 01:14

    Background

  • 01:15

    Our story begins with not a bridge but a ferry, in 1927 the bee line ferry company started

  • 01:23

    operations transporting vehicles and passengers across the Tampa bay.

  • 01:27

    It ran between Bay Vista Park in St. Petersburg and Piney Point.

  • 01:31

    A number of bridges were proposed for the area, but a few world wide events got in the

  • 01:37

    way, including the Great Depression and ww2.

  • 01:42

    Eventually in 1944 in preparation for the building of a bridge the St. Petersburg Port

  • 01:49

    Authority bought the remaining of the 50 year franchise for the ferry service.

  • 01:54

    It was to be operated until a new bridge was completed, but that wouldnt begin for another

  • 02:01

    6 years.

  • 02:02

    Over the remaining years of the 1940s several concepts were produced, but again the bridge

  • 02:08

    seemed far away when contractor Bail, Horton, and Associates failed to raise the 10 million

  • 02:16

    in funding required.

  • 02:18

    Finally in 1950 another contractor Parsons, Brinckerhoff, Hogan & Macdonald was hired

  • 02:25

    and this time the money was secured.

  • 02:28

    The bRidge was to be one of the longest in the world and would require the construction

  • 02:32

    of its own concrete factory.

  • 02:35

    It was to be 15 miles long, and would require 12,104,000 pounds (5,490,000 kg) of structural

  • 02:41

    steel, 8,536,700 pounds (3,872,200 kg) of rebar and 115,980 cubic yards of concrete.

  • 02:49

    I should say that this bridge is only 1 of two that made up the final sunshine skyway

  • 02:56

    that would experience tragedy.

  • 02:58

    This first structure consisted of 32 concrete piers set every 135 feet apart from a central

  • 03:08

    shipping Chanel which had a space of 864 feet between piers.

  • 03:14

    On the piers sat post tensioned concrete girder trestles; with a steel cantilever and central

  • 03:20

    suspended section.

  • 03:23

    The roadway was 2 lanes had a maximum speed limit of 45mph and was unlit.

  • 03:31

    The bridge was built between 19th October 1950 and September 9 1954, on its opening

  • 03:39

    day some 15,000 cars would cross the bridge in a 12 hour span.

  • 03:45

    Eventually the 2 lanes would become a bit of a bottleneck, and a new addition to the

  • 03:50

    crossing was planned.

  • 03:52

    The new bridge would essentially be a carbon copy of the Already established crossing,

  • 03:58

    keeping the vital shipping channel and cantilever truss design.

  • 04:03

    In 1966 the construction permit was issued.

  • 04:08

    Initial works were delayed when it was discovered that pier 1s had developed cracks needing

  • 04:14

    immediate remediation work.

  • 04:16

    But eventually in 1971 the new bridge was complete, this gave a total 4 lane capacity

  • 04:23

    2 going north and 2 going south.

  • 04:27

    The original bridge was converted for northbound traffic.

  • 04:31

    And thus the crossing was complete, on average roughly 12k vehicles would make the crossing

  • 04:36

    per day in each direction, and this generated some income for the state.

  • 04:43

    The bridges, although built with shipping traffic in mind, didn't have much in the way

  • 04:48

    of protection.

  • 04:49

    A 400ft wide channel had been cut into the river bed when the original bridge was constructed.

  • 04:56

    Wooden piles had been installed to protect either side of the Original bridges center

  • 05:00

    span pylons, but over the years they had rotted away.

  • 05:05

    The structure itself was designed to withstand 50lbs per square foot of horizontal load from

  • 05:11

    wind.

  • 05:13

    That pretty much made up the only protection available to the bridge, in comparison to

  • 05:16

    more Modern designs essentially the sunshine skyway was a sitting duck.

  • 05:20

    But strangely it wasn’t that the bridge had never been hit in its history queit the

  • 05:25

    contrary:

  • 05:27

    At least 7 times the bridge had experienced minor collisions from waterborne vessels.

  • 05:32

    one of which was caused by an earlier maritime disaster, the sinking of the USCGC Blackthorn.

  • 05:40

    During recovery operations an alternative shipping route was set up next to piers 1n

  • 05:47

    2n during the diversion a vessel struck the bridge on the 16th February 1980, but the

  • 05:54

    year would welcome a far worse collision.

  • 06:04

    The disaster.**

  • 06:07

    The mv summit venture was a bulk carrier and in 1980 it was still relatively new being

  • 06:14

    built in 1976, by Oshima Shipbuilding Co. of Nagasaki, Japan.

  • 06:19

    The 609 feet (186 m) long, 85.5 feet (26.1 m) wide, gross weight of 19,735 ton ship was

  • 06:27

    owned and operated by Hercules Carriers, Inc., of Monrovia, Liberia.

  • 06:34

    And in all intents and purposes was a perfectly good modern vessel, built to transport goods,

  • 06:40

    and on a day in may 1980 it was doing just that.

  • 06:45

    As you may know local pilots are often mandated in tricky areas to assist with navigating

  • 06:51

    difficult waterways, and Tampa Bay was no different.

  • 06:55

    Although when on board the pilot is controlling the vessel it is still up to the captain to

  • 07:00

    make final decisions on what the ship does.

  • 07:07

    Pilot John E. Lerro.

  • 07:10

    assigned to the mv summit venture arrived at the tampa bay pilot station at 0420 am,

  • 07:18

    at this time he had determined the visibility to be at least 2 miles in the light mist.

  • 07:25

    Lerro contacted the Summit venture to ascertain information on the ships size and characteristics

  • 07:30

    and began to plan his shift.

  • 07:34

    Before departing for the ship he found out about the expected traffic for the morning

  • 07:38

    around the bay and got weather reports for the day.

  • 07:41

    At 0500 lerro contacted the summit venture again and informed the ships master of the

  • 07:47

    location and time he would meet the vessel.

  • 07:50

    It would take roughly 45 minutes for the pilot's boat to reach the vessel; today lerro had

  • 07:57

    some company a trainee; the two departed at 0540 at roughly the same time the summit venture

  • 08:06

    was raising its anchor in preparation to head out towards the entrance of Tampa bay.

  • 08:12

    The two reached the ship at 0620, upon boarding they were escorted to the bridge of the summit

  • 08:17

    venture, there they were introduced to the crew on shift and shown the navigational equipment

  • 08:23

    onboard.

  • 08:24

    Visibility was between 3-4 miles at this time but the mist had turned into a light rain.

  • 08:33

    At 06:30 the pilot assumed control and ordered half ahead from the engine, shortly after

  • 08:41

    the pilot-trainee was given a go and assumed the conn and maneuvered the SUMMIT VENTURE

  • 08:47

    into the egmont channel.

  • 08:50

    At 0650 the pilot trainee ordered full ahead to overtake a tug before meeting an outbound

  • 08:56

    ship the M/V GOOD SAILOR, by the time the Venture reached bUoy 8 visibility was still

  • 09:03

    at around 3-4 miles.

  • 09:05

    The Egmont Key lighthouse was passed about 0706, and visibility was still good, however

  • 09:14

    quickly a rain shower set in, the pilot requested a lookout be posted as well as an anchor watch

  • 09:22

    at the bow in anticipation of reduced visibility.

  • 09:26

    Next the ship passed 13 and 14, buoys 13 was seen and verified by the pilot, 16 was visually

  • 09:34

    as well, and bUOyS 15, 16, lA, and 2A, as well as the sunshine skyway bridge could be

  • 09:42

    seen on the radar at 6 nm.

  • 09:45

    The rain was increasing but nothing to worry about yet, as the pilot would later say, "just

  • 09:51

    rain, but not heavy rain."

  • 09:53

    Over the next few minutes the rain would become more intense, this coupled with the soon to

  • 09:58

    be approach to the bridge, the pilot took over control from the trainee.

  • 10:03

    The SUMMIT VENTURE passed between buoys 15 and 16, buoys 1A and 2A were not visible,

  • 10:12

    but they still remained clearly visible on radar.

  • 10:16

    A sudden heavy downwash hit the vessel, this had 2 effects on the ship 1 was to reduce

  • 10:22

    physically being able to see anything as and 2 it obliterated the radar's ability to see

  • 10:30

    as well, because the radio waves bounce off the rain, causing a thing called rain returns,

  • 10:38

    not good.

  • 10:39

    The pilot now faced essentially with a blind approach to the bridge had to act quickly

  • 10:45

    he would later say "I started reviewing my options immediately.

  • 10:49

    . . the rains came, but the wind had to be 30 to 10, 20, 30 seconds later.

  • 10:53

    I don't know how long."

  • 10:54

    The trainee frantically tried to find buoys 1 and 2 on the radar, they got a glimpse for

  • 11:00

    a brief moment at a distance of 3/4 of a mile but again the rain returns destroyed the view

  • 11:06

    on the radar screen.

  • 11:08

    Frantically the lookout tried to see the buoy but no luck, the ship was turning all still

  • 11:14

    blind, at About 0731, the pilot ordered the vessel's speed reduced to slow ahead maneuvering.

  • 11:22

    Pier 2s came into view just 1 ship's length away, the pilot ordered full astern on the

  • 11:29

    engine order telegraph and ordered "hard to port-let go both anchors.

  • 11:36

    The summit venture struck the sunshine skyway’s pier 2s at 0734 the 20,000-ton ship along

  • 11:45

    with strong winds from astern pushed the bow into the bridge with tremendous force, the

  • 11:51

    shock vibrated through the structure.

  • 11:53

    A significant portion of the bridge between piers 3s and 1n fell into the water.

  • 11:59

    A 100ft section of the bridge crashed across the ship's bow, the pilot immediately broadcast

  • 12:05

    a mayday message.

  • 12:06

    He informed the Coast Guard that the bridge was down and told them to notify the Sunshine

  • 12:11

    Skyway Bridge authorities to stop vehicular traffic.

  • 12:15

    Don't forget, the poor visibility wasn’t just affecting the ship, vehicles making the

  • 12:21

    crossing as well many couldnt see what had unfolded, Six cars, a truck, and a Greyhound

  • 12:28

    bus were dropped into the water below.

  • 12:31

    In a twist of luck Wesley MacIntire who was driving a pickup truck went off the bridge

  • 12:37

    only to hit the mv summit ventures bow slowing its descent into the water, mcintire managed

  • 12:44

    to escape when his Ford Courier momentarily floated on the surface, he was fished out

  • 12:50

    the bay by some of the ship's crew.

  • 12:53

    Noone else who crashed into the water survived which totaled 35 lives, tragically the survivor

  • 13:00

    guilt would haunt mcintire for the rest of his life.

  • 13:03

    Tragically 23 of the deaths were from the greyhound bus.

  • 13:04

    Emergency services shut the bridge and attempted to recover and rescue any victims, by 0955,

  • 13:10

    two tug boats and an additional pilot were on the scene, and it was found that the venture

  • 13:15

    was taking on some water, The vessel was pulled clear of the impact site at about 1200.

  • 13:21

    Needless to say the cause of the disaster had to be found out, ands this leads us on

  • 13:27

    to the investigation.

  • 13:30

    the investigation Investigators initially inspected the bridge

  • 13:37

    and found that pier 1s showed lots of cracking throughout.

  • 13:43

    Clearly there was a serious failure of the bridge, but that's hardly unsurprising an

  • 13:48

    un-protected bridge succumbing to such a serious collision.

  • 13:52

    This means that the lack of proper protection must take some of the blame, the ntsb report

  • 13:58

    even hints at this: “Several bridges with pier protection systems

  • 14:02

    have survived collisions similar to the ramming of the Sunshine Skyway Bridge without major

  • 14:08

    damage to piers or superstructure.”

  • 14:11

    Most collisions between bridges and shipping are caused by human error again as pointed

  • 14:17

    out in the NTSB report, and because of this you need to be able to mitigate this risk

  • 14:23

    with proper pier protection, something that sunshine skyway lacked.

  • 14:30

    But of course we need to find someone to blame, and this falls at the feet of the summit ventures

  • 14:35

    crew, and the pilot.

  • 14:36

    Again the official report said that Upon loss of visual and radar navigation the NTSB stated:

  • 14:40

    “The SUMMIT VENTURE probably would not have struck the Sunshine Skyway Bridge if the pilot

  • 14:46

    had turned the vessel hard to starboard immediately upon the initial loss of navigational information

  • 14:51

    on the radar.”

  • 14:53

    The severe sudden weather was the spark that set off the chain of events that led to the

  • 14:58

    crash, but the pilot should have made the evasive action to avoid collision, however

  • 15:04

    the ultimate blame has to be laid at the feet of the ship's master and by extension the

  • 15:09

    captain, as they have the ultimate command over the ship, Even if a pilot is at the controls

  • 15:16

    It was found that the company that owned the ship often relied heavily on pilots and failed

  • 15:21

    to take over when required on several occasions.

  • 15:25

    The report put the initial blame at the summit venture, that's kinda obvious, but the lack

  • 15:30

    of pier protection and roadway warning systems meant that the collision became fatal.

  • 15:36

    Although John E. Lerro was cleared of any wrongdoing in a grand jury and coast guard

  • 15:41

    inquiry; he was quickly forced to retire on medical grounds.

  • 15:45

    I order to eventually resume traffic, the surviving original bridge was converted back

  • 15:50

    to two way traffic whilst the state decided on whether to repair or replace the sunshine

  • 15:57

    skyway crossing.

  • 15:59

    A tunnel seemed difficult to build, and the cost to repair the pretty old design pushed

  • 16:05

    the state to go down the route of a clean sheet new bridge.

  • 16:10

    Governor of Florida at the time Bob Graham had an idea to build a "signature" cable-stayed

  • 16:16

    bridge with a span that would be 50% wider than the oldBridge.

  • 16:21

    The bridge would also have a wider shipping lane area, and importantly proper concrete

  • 16:26

    protective dolphins for the structure's piers.

  • 16:31

    Construction would start in January 1983 and finally be completed in April 30, 1987 ironically

  • 16:39

    a day before the ribbon cutting, a ship actually collided with one of concrete dolphins, but

  • 16:45

    this time the crossing was safe.

  • 16:49

    The remains of the older crossing was finally fully demolished in 2008..

  • 16:52

    But what of the MV Summit venture?

  • 16:56

    Well she was repaired and did sail again, continuing service under the same name, she

  • 17:03

    would be sold off to another company in 1993, but would sink just of the Vietnamese coast

  • 17:10

    in 2010 under the name of Jian Mao 9, luckily none

  • 17:55

    of her crew were killed.

  • 18:09

    https://www.ntsb.gov/investigations/AccidentReports/Reports/MAR8103.pdf

  • 18:13

    https://www.researchgate.net/figure/Collapse-of-the-Sunshine-Skyway-Bridge-in-Tampa-FL-1980-due-to-ship-collision_fig1_267936569

  • 18:16

    https://www.flmd.uscourts.gov/maritime-matters

All

The example sentences of OUTBOUND in videos (14 in total of 27)

at preposition or subordinating conjunction 0650 cardinal number the determiner pilot noun, singular or mass trainee noun, singular or mass ordered verb, past tense full adjective ahead adverb to to overtake verb, base form a determiner tug noun, singular or mass before preposition or subordinating conjunction meeting verb, gerund or present participle an determiner outbound noun, singular or mass
now adverb let verb, base form s proper noun, singular log noun, singular or mass in preposition or subordinating conjunction as preposition or subordinating conjunction aaron proper noun, singular to to the determiner sandbox noun, singular or mass and coordinating conjunction create verb, base form an determiner outbound noun, singular or mass change noun, singular or mass set verb, past participle .
both determiner flights noun, plural outbound verb, non-3rd person singular present currently adverb take verb, base form around adverb six cardinal number and coordinating conjunction a determiner half noun, singular or mass hours noun, plural while preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner flight noun, singular or mass back adverb
in preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner same adjective way noun, singular or mass , create verb, base form a determiner rule noun, singular or mass for preposition or subordinating conjunction udp proper noun, singular protocol noun, singular or mass and coordinating conjunction these determiner two cardinal number rules noun, plural for preposition or subordinating conjunction outbound noun, singular or mass connections noun, plural .
reps noun, plural can modal make verb, base form outbound verb, base form calls noun, plural in preposition or subordinating conjunction a determiner single adjective click noun, singular or mass from preposition or subordinating conjunction within preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner crm proper noun, singular and coordinating conjunction whenever wh-adverb
already adverb i personal pronoun have verb, non-3rd person singular present a determiner good adjective luck noun, singular or mass and coordinating conjunction outbound noun, singular or mass but coordinating conjunction they personal pronoun would modal not adverb do verb, base form it personal pronoun now adverb that wh-determiner would modal
outbound noun, singular or mass phone noun, singular or mass calls noun, plural but coordinating conjunction also adverb take verb, base form incoming adjective calls noun, plural and coordinating conjunction can modal send verb, base form text noun, singular or mass messages noun, plural as adverb well adverb .
his possessive pronoun rise noun, singular or mass to to power verb, base form in preposition or subordinating conjunction legends proper noun, singular involved verb, past participle a determiner mission noun, singular or mass called verb, past participle the determiner outbound proper noun, singular flight proper noun, singular , which wh-determiner was verb, past tense tenuously adverb
the determiner homepod proper noun, singular mini proper noun, singular has verb, 3rd person singular present is verb, 3rd person singular present that preposition or subordinating conjunction it personal pronoun can modal make verb, base form outbound verb, base form phone noun, singular or mass calls noun, plural but coordinating conjunction also adverb take verb, base form incoming adjective calls noun, plural and coordinating conjunction send verb, base form
wow noun, singular or mass yeah interjection this determiner room noun, singular or mass is verb, 3rd person singular present off preposition or subordinating conjunction outbound noun, singular or mass really adverb it personal pronoun 's verb, 3rd person singular present nice adjective to to see verb, base form inside preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner old adjective quirky noun, singular or mass
so adverb let verb, base form 's possessive ending say verb, base form this determiner is verb, 3rd person singular present a determiner graph noun, singular or mass of preposition or subordinating conjunction whatever wh-determiner outbound verb, non-3rd person singular present calls verb, 3rd person singular present i personal pronoun 'm verb, non-3rd person singular present just adverb gonna proper noun, singular use noun, singular or mass that preposition or subordinating conjunction
aboard proper noun, singular the determiner outbound noun, singular or mass flight noun, singular or mass which wh-determiner would modal help verb, base form them personal pronoun prepare verb, non-3rd person singular present for preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner eventual adjective war noun, singular or mass so preposition or subordinating conjunction we personal pronoun know verb, non-3rd person singular present what wh-pronoun happened verb, past participle to to the determiner outbound noun, singular or mass flight noun, singular or mass
three cardinal number minutes noun, plural had verb, past tense passed verb, past participle , they personal pronoun did verb, past tense equally adverb well adverb when wh-adverb watching verb, gerund or present participle videos noun, plural of preposition or subordinating conjunction an determiner outbound noun, singular or mass trip noun, singular or mass ,
so adverb now adverb , once adverb i personal pronoun know verb, non-3rd person singular present what wh-pronoun my possessive pronoun inbound noun, singular or mass and coordinating conjunction outbound noun, singular or mass is verb, 3rd person singular present , and coordinating conjunction i personal pronoun write verb, non-3rd person singular present this determiner out preposition or subordinating conjunction .

Use "outbound" in a sentence | "outbound" example sentences

How to use "outbound" in a sentence?

  • Fame is simply an imbalance between inbound and outbound attention.
    -Clay Shirky-
  • If you have more money than brains, you should focus on outbound marketing, If you have more brains than money, you should focus on inbound marketing.
    -Guy Kawasaki-
  • Terrorists can utilize any vulnerability in the system and that would include outbound shipments.
    -Asa Hutchinson-

Definition and meaning of OUTBOUND

What does "outbound mean?"

/ˈoutbound/

adjective
travelling away from particular place.
adverb
away from particular place.