
The Mt. Roberts Aerial Tramway (bottom right) above Juneau, Alaska, is the first North American tramway built and installed by Poma of America, Inc., Grand Junction, Colorado. The upper terminal tower was designed and analyzed by Les Okreglak of Pol-X West, Inc., Carson City, Nevada with FEA software from Pittsburgh-based Algor, Inc. Rock anchors (top right) support the weight of the tower. Tramway photo courtesy of Rick Spear, Poma of America. Anchor photo and model courtesy of Les Okreglak, Pol-X West.
September 4, 1998, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania - Two thousand
feet above Juneau, Alaska, from the Mt. Roberts Aerial Tramway upper terminal,
visitors can view pine covered mountains from the enclosed platform, browse
through boutiques and dine in café-style restaurants. The 170-foot terminal
tower and 3,000-square foot platform are connected by a covered walkway, which
leads to a loading deck where passengers board and exit large tramway cabins
carrying 60 people at a time.
Open for public operation since August 1996, the Mt. Roberts Aerial Tramway is
the first tramway in North America manufactured and installed by Poma of
America, Inc., Grand Junction, Colorado. To ensure that the upper terminal
platform and tower would withstand the unpredictable Alaskan environment, Poma
of America enlisted the finite element analysis (FEA) expertise of Les
Okreglak, P.E., principal engineer and president of Pol-X West, Inc., an
engineering consulting firm in Carson City, Nevada.
Mr. Okreglak used FEA software from Pittsburgh-based, engineering software
producer Algor, Inc. to analyze the massive support tower, cables, platform and
covered walkway. The task proved to be no small feat for Mr. Okreglak, who had
to consider 120 mph winds, snow and ice as well as the loads imposed by the
operation of the tramway. He also had to design individual members of the tower
structure in such a way that each could be transported by helicopter since no
road access was available to the construction site of the tower.
Okreglak built the 3-D tower model in CADKEY and transferred it to Superdraw
III, Algor's precision finite element model-building tool. From Superdraw III,
Mr. Okreglak used Algor's Beam Design Editor to apply loading and boundary
conditions to the tower geometry.
"Algor's beam modeling capabilities enable me to easily make adjustments
to the model as specifications and design needs change," said Mr.
Okreglak. During one instance in the design phase, the specified snow loading
value was increased substantially, according to Mr. Okreglak. "I was able
to easily modify the design to accommodate the larger load."
Once the design was optimized, 3-D CAD models were used to make detailed
drawings of the steel leg assemblies that had to be transported separately and
constructed on Mt. Roberts. The completed Algor beam model contained over 1500
beam elements, which Okreglak analyzed in six different load cases using linear
static stress analysis.
Besides wind, snow and operational loads, Mr. Okreglak's main concerns included
deflection that could result from the weight of the 250-ton steel tower and
axial forces in a series of support cables. These cables connect to 36 rock
anchors in the mountainside and provide the sole source of support for the
tower. Mr. Okreglak used 3-D topographical maps to determine the placement of
the anchors and tower foundations. He applied fully constrained boundary
conditions to these points in the FEA model.
Over the course of six months, Mr. Okreglak worked with Poma engineers to
modify the design by adding and changing support members to meet changing
design specifications. The model needed to be perfected since no prototype
testing was possible on such a large structure. According to Mr. Okreglak, the
final analysis results were extremely accurate.
"Once I completed the analysis results, another analysis firm
double-checked my calculations. They matched Algor's results almost
exactly." Mr. Okreglak said. "Actual deflections of the tower were
between two and five inches. This is very small when you consider the size and
mass of the whole assembly."
According to Mr. Okreglak, the tramway tower project was challenging because of
the environmental factors he had to account for in his design. "Designing
the tower members for transport by helicopter was very difficult because the
members had to be a very specific weight and length," Mr. Okreglak said.
"I could not have completed this design without Algor's beam
modeling."
Algor, Inc. provides finite element analysis, Mechanical Event Simulation for
Virtual Prototyping, CAD interfacing and piping analysis products to more than
16,000 engineers located in over 60 countries. In addition, the Algor
Publishing Division offers books, videos and multimedia products which help
engineers do better design, simulation and analysis with virtually any
engineering software.
For more information, contact Virginia Goebel at Algor, Inc., +1 (412)
967-2700.