ASTM E2103-06 - 1.4.2006
 
Significance and Use

This classification defines bridge elements that are major components of most bridges. The elemental clarification is the common thread linking activities and participants in a bridge project from initial planning through operations, maintenance, and disposal.

The users of this classification include federal, state, county and city officials, cost planners, estimators, schedulers, engineers, project/program managers, specification writers, operating and maintenance staff, manufacturers, and educators.

Use this classification when doing the following:

4.3.1 Estimating and controlling costs during planning, design, and construction. Use this classification to prepare budgets and to establish elemental cost plans before design begins. The project manager uses cost plans to control project cost, time, and quality, and to set design-to-cost targets.

4.3.2 Conducting value engineering workshops. Use this classification as a checklist to ensure that alternatives for all elements of significant cost in the bridge project are analyzed in the creativity phase of the job plan. Also, use the elemental cost data to expedite the development of cost models for bridge systems.

4.3.3 Developing initial project master schedules. Since projects are built element by element, this classification is an appropriate basis for preparing construction schedules at the start of the design process.

4.3.4 Structuring cost manuals and recording construction, operating, and maintenance costs in a computer database. Having a cost manual or computer database in an elemental format assists the preparation of an economic analysis early in the design stage and at a reasonable cost.

4.3.5 Structuring preliminary project descriptions during the conceptual design phase. This classification facilitates the description of the scope of the project in a clear, concise, and logical sequence for presentation to the client; it provides the basis for the preparation of more detailed elemental estimates during the early concept and preliminary design phases, and it enhances communication between designers and clients by providing a clear statement of the designer’intent.

 
1. Scope

1.1 This classification covers bridge elements and related approach work. Elements, as defined here, are major components common to most bridges. Elements usually perform a given function, regardless of the design specification, construction method, or materials used. This classification serves as a consistent reference for analysis, evaluation, cost estimating, and monitoring during the feasibility, planning and design stages of bridges. It also enhances reporting at all stages from feasibility and planning through the preparation of working documents, construction, maintenance, rehabilitation, and disposal.

1.2 This classification applies to bridges and related approach work. It excludes specialized structures such as signs and signals related to general highway use, but it does include bridge parapets, medians, drainage, and barriers needed to lessen vehicular impact.

1.3 This classification is similar to the E 1557

This standard does not purport to address all of the safety concerns, if any, associated with its use. It is the responsibility of the user of this standard to establish appropriate safety and health practices and determine the applicability of regulatory limitations prior to use.

 
2. Referenced Documents

E1185-15(2020)e1

Standard Guide for Selecting Economic Methods for Evaluating Investments in Buildings and Building Systems (Includes all amendments and changes 5/6/2020).

E1369-15(2020)e1

Standard Guide for Selecting Techniques for Treating Uncertainty and Risk in the Economic Evaluation of Buildings and Building Systems (Includes all amendments and changes 5/6/2020).

E1074-15(2020)e1

Standard Practice for Measuring Net Benefits and Net Savings for Investments in Buildings and Building Systems (Includes all amendments and changes 5/6/2020).

E1121-15(2020)e1

Standard Practice for Measuring Payback for Investments in Buildings and Building Systems (Includes all amendments and changes 5/6/2020).

E631-15

Standard Terminology of Building Constructions

E833-14(2021)

Standard Terminology of Building Economics

E917-17(2023)

Standard Practice for Measuring Life-Cycle Costs of Buildings and Building Systems

E964-15(2020)e1

Standard Practice for Measuring Benefit-to-Cost and Savings-to-Investment Ratios for Buildings and Building Systems (Includes all amendments and changes 5/6/2020).

E1057-15(2020)e1

Standard Practice for Measuring Internal Rate of Return and Adjusted Internal Rate of Return for Investments in Buildings and Building Systems (Includes all amendments and changes 5/6/2020).

E1699-14(2020)

Standard Practice for Performing Value Engineering (VE)/Value Analysis (VA) of Projects, Products and Processes

E1804-16(2023)

Standard Practice for Performing and Reporting Cost Analysis During the Design Phase of a Project

E1946-18(2023)

Standard Practice for Measuring Cost Risk of Buildings and Building Systems and Other Constructed Projects

E2013-20

Standard Practice for Developing Functions, Constructing FAST Diagrams, and Performing Function Analysis During Value Engineering (VE)/Value Analysis (VA) Study

E2506-15(2020)e1

Standard Guide for Developing a Cost-Effective Risk Mitigation Plan for New and Existing Constructed Facilities (Includes all amendments and changes 8/24/2023).

E2691-20

Standard Practice for Job Productivity Measurement

Discount Factor Tables

Adjunct to Practices , , , , and