BALTIMORE, MD. -- After weeks of preparation, crews are scheduled to conduct a controlled demolition Sunday evening to break down the largest remaining span of the collapsed Francis Scott Key Bridge in Maryland, which came crashing down under the impact of a massive container ship on March 26.
The steel span ā which is an estimated 500 feet (152 metres) long and weighs up to 600 tons (544 metric tons) ā landed on the shipās bow after the Dali lost power and crashed into one of the bridgeās support columns shortly after leaving Baltimore. Since then, the ship has been stuck among the wreckage and Baltimoreās busy port has been closed to most maritime traffic.
Six members of a roadwork crew plunged to their deaths in the collapse. The last of their bodies was recovered from the underwater wreckage earlier this week. All the victims were Latino immigrants who came to the U.S. for job opportunities. They were filling potholes on an overnight shift when the bridge was destroyed.
The controlled demolition will allow the Dali to be refloated and guided back into the Port of Baltimore. Once the ship is removed, maritime traffic can begin returning to normal, which will provide relief for thousands of longshoremen, truckers and small business owners who have seen their jobs impacted by the closure.
The Daliās 21-member crew will shelter in place aboard the ship while the explosives are detonated.
William Marks, a spokesperson for the crew, said they would shelter āin a designated safe placeā during the demolition. āAll precautions are being taken to ensure everyoneās safety,ā he said in an email.
Officials said the demolition is the safest and most efficient way to remove steel under a high level of pressure and tension.
āItās unsafe for the workers to be on or in the immediate vicinity of the bridge truss for those final cuts,ā officials said in a news release Sunday.
In a videographic released this week, authorities said engineers are using precision cuts to control how the trusses break down. They said the method allows for āsurgical precisionā and the steel structure will be āthrust away from the Daliā when the explosives send it tumbling into the water.
Once itās demolished, hydraulic grabbers will lift the resulting sections of steel onto barges.
āItās important to note that this controlled demolition is not like what you would see in a movie,ā the video says, noting that from a distance it will sound like fireworks or loud thunder and give off puffs of smoke.
So far, about 6,000 tons (5,443 metric tons) of steel and concrete have been removed from the collapse site. Officials estimate the total amount of wreckage at 50,000 tons (45,359 metric tons), about the equivalent of 3,800 loaded dump trucks.
Officials previously said they hoped to remove the Dali by May 10 and reopen the portās 50-foot (15.2-metre) main channel by the end of May.
The Dali is currently scheduled to be refloated during high tide on Tuesday, officials said Sunday. They said three or four tugboats will be used to guide the ship to a nearby terminal in the Port of Baltimore. It will likely remain there for a few weeks and undergo temporary repairs before being moved to a shipyard for more substantial repairs.
The Dali crew members havenāt been allowed to leave the grounded vessel since the disaster. Officials said they have been busy maintaining the ship and assisting investigators. Of the crew members, 20 are from India and one is Sri Lankan.
The U.S. National Transportation Safety Board and the FBI are conducting investigations into the bridge collapse.
Danish shipping giant Maersk chartered the Dali for a planned trip from Baltimore to Sri Lanka, but the ship didnāt get far. Its crew sent a mayday call saying they had lost power and had no control of the steering system. Minutes later, the ship rammed into the bridge.
Officials have said the safety board investigation will focus on the shipās electrical system.