Baltimore bridge collapse: an engineer explains what happened, and what needs to change

Why did the bridge collapse, and what can we do to make other bridges more safe against such collapse?

Aerial photo of a large cargo vessel as it crashes into the Francis Scott Key Bridge in Baltimore, Maryland, prompting its collapse.
Aerial photo of a large cargo vessel as it crashes into the Francis Scott Key Bridge in Baltimore, Maryland, prompting its collapse.
(Image credit: Maxar / AAP)

When the container ship MV Dali, 300 meters long and massing around 100,000 tons, lost power and slammed into one of the support piers of the Francis Scott Key Bridge in Baltimore, the bridge collapsed in moments. Six people are presumed dead, several others injured, and the city and region are expecting a months-long logistical nightmare in the absence of a crucial transport link.

It was a shocking event, not only for the public but for bridge engineers like me. We work very hard to ensure bridges are safe, and overall the probability of being injured or worse in a bridge collapse remains even lower than the chance of being struck by lightning.

Colin Caprani
Associate Professor, Civil Engineering, Monash University

A/Prof. Colin Caprani is a Chartered Structural Engineer (CEng MIEI, MIStructE) and Fellow of Engineers Australia (FIEAust), with considerable industrial and academic experience. He has worked as a design structural engineer on a wide range of projects and his general research areas involve the probabilistic safety assessment of structures, specializing in highway bridge loading for short- and long-span bridges and human-induced vibration of structures.