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The wind is not the only element to take its toll on the span. The damp, foggy air has also kept its painters and engineers busy. "You couldn't have put the bridge in a more corrosive atmosphere than in the middle of the Golden Gate with that salt fog coming in," Mohn said. Engineers discovered in the 1970s that the bridge's suspender ropes
-- the vertical cables that connect the deck to the main cables -- had corroded, some so badly that they could be picked apart with a pocket knife. The problem in part, Mohn said, was that bridge maintenance had been neglected for many years, particularly during World War II. A design flaw also hastened corrosion. All of the cables were replaced in the mid-1970s. There was another scare on the bridge during its 50th anniversary in 1987 when an estimated 300,000 pedestrians gathered on the span, which was closed to vehicle traffic. The weight of the crowd flattened out the arch of the bridge deck and caused some revelers to suffer motion sickness as the bridge swayed. Although the bridge supported its heaviest load in 50 years that day, Mohn would later conclude the weight and movement had not exceeded its design capacity. Today, among the engineers' most pressing concerns is the potential effect of a major earthquake. The 1989 Loma Prieta earthquake, which occurred during a live broadcast of the World Series, caused two 50-foot sections of the San Francisco-Oakland Bay Bridge to collapse. The Golden Gate Bridge was not damaged. But the quake still spurred bridge officials to undertake a massive retrofit of the span
-- a $660 million project that began in 1997 and is still under way.
Bridge pylons have been reinforced with steel and towers under the bridge's two approaches were replaced, all while keeping the bridge open and its appearance unchanged. Retrofitting the suspension span is the project's final phase, although experts say its flexibility makes it less vulnerable in an earthquake. "If I knew when an earthquake was coming, I'd get to the suspension span of the Bay Bridge or the Golden Gate Bridge," said Abolhassan Astaneh-Asl, an engineering professor at the University of California, Berkeley who studied the Golden Gate Bridge after Loma Prieta. "They are safest places to be." The goal is to withstand an 8.1-magnitude earthquake when the retrofit is completed years from now. The bridge, like other infrastructure, has a lifespan. But Bauer and Mohn say with proper maintenance, the Golden Gate Bridge will endure. The retrofit project alone will buy the span another 150 years, Bauer estimated. "I believe the bridge was built to absolute great standards of workmanship," she said on a recent morning at a vista point overlooking the span. "What we are doing right now is repairing ... and you can truly do it indefinitely."
[Associated
Press;
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