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"Here is a pic of the bridge before the accident."

 

Wow! Look at all that cracked and crumbling concrete on those abutments.Typical of lots of freeze/thaws.Appears that no repairs had been made when this was taken.I wonder when the last time their civil engineers looked at this. 

 

Anyone have photos after the failure?

Originally Posted by Zett:

Looks like a black sportscar was pulled out, possibly a mustang. My bet is that the driver lost control and struck a support.

Now why would you make THAT assumption?

 

It is MUCH more logical to think that a heat kink in the rails, at the area where the track transitions over the bridge, caused the derailment, which brought the whole bridge down on top of the car.

Originally Posted by Hot Water:
Originally Posted by Zett:

Looks like a black sportscar was pulled out, possibly a mustang. My bet is that the driver lost control and struck a support.

Now why would you make THAT assumption?

 

It is MUCH more logical to think that a heat kink in the rails, at the area where the track transitions over the bridge, caused the derailment, which brought the whole bridge down on top of the car.

 

Sorry your right Hotwater there's no way that the accident could have been caused by the car. I don't even know why I comment on these things with your superior knowledge present.

As a side note, that C&NW line was built in 1911 and suspect the bridge dates back to that time. In other words, an old bridge. But, even if a bridge were built last week, don't think any bridge could have survived about 2000 tons of careening freight cars and coal landing on it. Just wonder how many millions/billions of tons had rolled over it up to this accident?

       Additionally, our friends from the legal community have already filed a suit against the Union Pacific. Believe I saw a couple of lawyers frantically digging through the mountain of coal, with their hands.

it's been many years since I lived in that general area.  Are we talking about the C&NW "New line" that parallel's the old CNS&M ROW and Hiway 41?  Just trying to picture in my mind where the accident occurred.  Is the intersecting road north of the end of the Edens Expy, or south?

 

Paul Fischer

Originally Posted by L & N:

Here is a pic of the bridge before the accident.

Steve

bridge1

Very typical of the infrastructure on thousands of bridges and overpasses in our country that carry our goods. There never seem's to be any funds available to replace or repair things like this, but there's always money available to build unneeded new highways. Who's to  blame for this situation? With Federal and state inspectors being laid off and their jobs being eliminated, this won't be the last of these.

 

At least this was only coal. This train could have been loaded with hazardous chemicals. No wonder residents of areas like these hate trains. This could have been a h**l of a lot worse. When the attorneys and the courts get this straightened out, if ever, a lot of money is going to change hands.

 

Why don't you stay in your basement
 
Originally Posted by BASEMENTBILL:
Originally Posted by L & N:

Here is a pic of the bridge before the accident.

Steve

bridge1

Very typical of the infrastructure on thousands of bridges and overpasses in our country that carry our goods. There never seem's to be any funds available to replace or repair things like this, but there's always money available to build unneeded new highways. Who's to  blame for this situation? With Federal and state inspectors being laid off and their jobs being eliminated, this won't be the last of these.

 

At least this was only coal. This train could have been loaded with hazardous chemicals. No wonder residents of areas like these hate trains. This could have been a h**l of a lot worse. When the attorneys and the courts get this straightened out, if ever, a lot of money is going to change hands.

 

 

Sadly folks, there are a lot more bridges like this in the Chicago area!  The one that comes to mind, is the one that carries the old Soo Line (now CN), and the CP (ex Milw) over Northwest Highway not far from DesPlaines.  I do not know if this one has been replaced by the CN or CP, but years back, it was bad!  Regarding the 2 fatalities in that car this past Wednesday, it probably happened so fast, they didn't know what hit them, and hopefully did not suffer.   But I'm just speculating....   Never the less, this will likely come out as a "being in the wrong place, at the wrong time" scenario for the two car occupants, but as had been said, the legal community will have a field day with this one.

Last edited by R Nelson
Originally Posted by R Nelson:

 the legal community will have a field day with this one.

Think so? I bet UP just cuts the son of the victims a big fat check (and whoeverelse is necessary) and washes their hands of it. They've already got the coal cleaned up and track fixed and trains running like nothing ever happened. How can there be an "investigation" the UP already shoved the track and bridge off to the side? It might be kind of tough to figure out what the problem was with the rail after a D8 pushed everything into a pile.

Northbrook, IL is my hometown. As some of you already know this UP line used to be Chicago & Northwestern and it's an old route. Less than a mile up the track is this concrete arch bridge that crosses Techny Rd., as you can see it dates back about 100 years to the building of the line, just like the abutments of the Shermer Rd. bridge where the derailment occurred.

 

Techny_Rd_Bridge

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The press conference with the lawyers for the family was televised locally. The deceased gentleman was the first boss of one of them. Their office is down the hall from the deceased's office. On Thursday, they secured a temporary restraining order that halted work at the site for 36 hours, that gave their "experts" time to go over the site to determine the cause of the accident. Of course, by the time the TRO was granted, UP already had been working on the site for a number of hours, including the removal of the car with the bodies. They also had installed a shoo-fly, and trains were running again. Good luck on determining the cause in that amount of time and that amount of post-accident work having been done. (By the way, once again I have to admire both the first responders and UP workers. High temperatures here since the 4th have been 101 and 102, if not higher.)

 

FARMER BILL, your video is of the prior accident at this location. Thanks for posting it.

Here's an interesting post picked up on Craigs List (questionable source, but this sounds pretty believable):

 

years ago Union Pacific wanted to replace that viaduct and told residents that it would take 6 months to finish. The residents were up in arms about it and kept *****ing and moaning to their city halls about how they would be inconvenienced with that main road being closed for that long. City Hall agreed and Union Pacific had it's hands tied and were told to make fixes to the viaduct without closing the road down. The lawyers for that poor family that got crushed by thousands of tons should be asking Northbrook and Glenview why they did not allow Union Pacific to replace the viaduct? Every single resident of those two towns should also be held accountable for the couples death. I hate selfish snobs from those two towns even more after this.

Mark, I find that Craig's List comment a little hard to believe. If Shermer Rd. were closed for bridge repairs anybody wanting to get to Glenview from Northbrook only has to drive west to Pfingsten Rd. (maybe 2 minutes extra). But you're right about the snobbery, my hometown (Northbrook) has gone very "upscale" in the past 40-50 years, that goes double for Glenview, LOL.

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