polk County Bridge Inspections  

Florida Bridge Information - Polk County

Old Dixie Hwy Drainage D

Florida State Bridge Inspections
Health Index 1Sufficiency Rating 2
74.5 77.5

National Bridge Inventory Rating
Functionally Obsolete The term "functionally obsolete" only means that a bridge does not meet current road design standards. For example, some bridges are "functionally obsolete" because they were built at a time when lane widths were narrower than the current standard.

Bridge Information
Structure Status: Posted for load (may include other restrictions such as temporary bridges which are load posted)
County: Polk County
Owner: County Highway Agency Maintenance Responsibility: County Highway Agency
Roadway: Old Dixie Hwy Facility Crossed: Drainage Ditch
Year Built: 1940 Reconstructed: 1960
Average Daily Traffic - State: 2,751
Average Daily Traffic - NBI: 3,027
Average Daily Truck Traffic - NBI: 90.8 (3 % of NBI Average Daily Traffic)
Future Average Daily Traffic - NBI: 3,784 in year 2025
Bypass, Detour Length: 1.9 mile
Toll System: On free road. The structure is toll-free and carries a toll-free highway.
Functional Classification: Rural - Local
Type of Service On the Structure: Highway
Lanes On the Structure: 2
Vertical Clearance Over Bridge Roadway: No restriction exists
Type of Service Under the Structure: Waterway
Lanes Under the Structure: 0
Vertical Clearance Under Bridge Roadway: Feature not a highway or railroad
Historical Significance: Historical significance is not determinable at this time.
Last Inspection - State: September 29, 2009
Last Inspection - NBI: September, 2005
Designated Inspection Frequency (NBI): Every 24 Months

Bridge Location

National Bridge Inventory Safety Feature
Bridge Median: No median
Bridge Railings: Inspected feature does not meet currently acceptable standards or a safety feature is required and none is provided.
Transitions: Inspected feature does not meet currently acceptable standards or a safety feature is required and none is provided.
Approach Guardrail: Inspected feature does not meet currently acceptable standards or a safety feature is required and none is provided.
Approach Guardrail Ends: Inspected feature does not meet currently acceptable standards or a safety feature is required and none is provided.

National Bridge Inventory Condition Ratings
Deck: NOT APPLICABLE
Superstructure: NOT APPLICABLE
Substructure: NOT APPLICABLE
Channel and Channel Protection: Bank protection is in need of minor repairs. River control devices and embankment protection have a little minor damage. Banks and/or channel have minor amounts of drift.
Culverts: Deterioration or initial disintegration, minor chloride contamination, cracking with some leaching, or spalls on concrete or masonry walls and slabs. Local minor scouring at curtain walls, wingwalls, or pipes. Metal culverts have a smooth curvature, non-symmetrical shape, significant corrosion or moderate pitting.

National Bridge Inventory Operating Ratings: Load Factor (LF) - 50.6 tons
National Bridge Inventory Ratings: Load Factor (LF) - 30.4 tons

National Bridge Inventory Appraisal Ratings
Structural Evaluation: 6 - Equal to present minimum criteria
Deck Geometry : 2 - Basically intolerable requiring high priority of replacement
Underclear, Vertical & Horizontal : N - Not applicable
Waterway Adequacy : 7 - Better than present minimum criteria
Approach Roadway Alignment : 9 - Superior to present desirable criteria

Critical Feature Inspection
Fracture Critical Details: N
Underwater Inspection: N
Other Special Inspection: N


1. The "health index" is a tool that measures the overall condition of a bridge. The health index typically includes about 10 to 12 different elements that are evaluated by the department. A lower health index means that more work would be required to improve the bridge to an ideal condition. A health index below 85 generally indicates that some repairs are needed, although it doesn't mean the bridge is unsafe. A low health index may also indicate that it would be more economical to replace the bridge than to repair it.

2. The "sufficiency rating" is a tool that is used to help determine whether a bridge that is structurally deficient or functionally obsolete should be repaired or just replaced. The sufficiency rating considers a number of factors, only about half of which relate to the condition of the bridge itself. The sufficiency ratings for bridges are part of a formula used by the Federal Highway Administration when it allocates federal funds to the states for bridge replacement.

Source: Office of Maintenance, Florida Department of Transportation (Last Update: January, 2010) & U.S. Department of Transportation

 
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