King Street Bridge, Melbourne — A Weld Crack Brittle-Fractured a New Span in the Cold
Summary
At about 11:00 on the cold winter morning of 10 July 1962, a suspended span of the fifteen-month-old King Street Bridge over the Yarra River in central Melbourne sagged and broke up beneath a 47-ton low-loader that was within the bridge's posted load limit; by chance no one was killed or injured. The cause was not overload, not a design under-strength, and not corrosion. It was a brittle fracture — a fast, low-energy crack that ran through all four main girders of the span — initiated at the toes of transverse fillet welds where cover plates had been welded onto the tension flanges, in a notch-sensitive high-tensile steel embrittled by hydrogen, locked-in welding stress, and a near-freezing temperature.
The bridge had been designed in 1959 by the consulting engineers Hardcastle & Richards for the contractor Utah Australia, fabricated in welded BHP high-tensile low-alloy steel by the subcontractor Johns & Waygood, and inspected for the Country Roads Board. The four suspended girders of the failed span, designated W.14-1 to W.14-4 and roughly 100 feet long, each carried thickening cover plates welded to the bottom (tension) flange to add section where the bending moment was highest. The transverse welds that closed off the ends of those cover plates were the fatal detail. They left a sharp geometric notch exactly where the steel was most highly stressed in tension, and in the heat-affected zone beside each weld the metal had been hardened, hydrogen-charged, and cracked during fabrication.
Brittle fracture needs three things together: a flaw, a tensile stress, and a steel cold and notch-sensitive enough to run the crack instead of yielding around it. The King Street span supplied all three at once. Pre-existing cracks sat at the weld toes; the cover-plate ends concentrated the tension; the high-carbon, high-tensile plate had poor notch toughness and was sitting at a temperature near its transition into brittle behaviour. When the heavy low-loader drove onto the western carriageway and raised the live-load stress, the cracks ran. The span dropped about a foot. The forensic verdict, established by the 1963 Royal Commission chaired by Sir George Barber, was unambiguous: brittle fracture from defective welds at the cover-plate terminations, in a steel and a detail that should never have been welded that way without preheat and toughness control.
The failure was, in retrospect, built in. The cracks at the weld toes had existed since fabrication and were not found by the inspectors of either Johns & Waygood or the Country Roads Board. Neither the contractor nor the fabricator fully grasped that high-tensile steel demanded a different welding discipline from ordinary mild steel — controlled heat input, preheat, low-hydrogen practice, and crack inspection. The bridge did not so much fail under traffic as wait for the first cold morning and the first heavy load to arrive together.
Timeline
The Build — A Heavy Steel Detail Welded the Wrong Way
King Street Bridge was a product of postwar confidence in welded high-tensile steel. Designed in 1959 by Hardcastle & Richards for Utah Australia, it used built-up plate girders rather than rolled sections, and where the bending moment peaked the design thickened the flanges by welding on additional cover plates — a routine and economical way to add section exactly where it is needed. The girders were fabricated by Johns & Waygood from high-tensile low-alloy steel rolled by BHP. On paper this was modern, efficient engineering: stronger steel, less of it, joined by welds rather than rivets.
The flaw lived in the interaction between the steel, the detail, and the welding. High-tensile low-alloy steel is not simply "stronger mild steel"; its higher carbon and alloy content make it harder to weld soundly. Without controlled preheat, low-hydrogen consumables, and managed cooling, the heat-affected zone beside a weld hardens, traps hydrogen, and cracks — hydrogen-assisted cold cracking. The BHP plate supplied was high in carbon, which the Royal Commission noted would have challenged even an experienced fabricator. Neither Utah nor Johns & Waygood fully appreciated this, and preheat around the weld areas was insufficient or absent, leaving high residual tensile stresses locked into the heat-affected zone.
Onto that metallurgical problem the design superimposed a geometric one. Terminating a cover plate with a transverse weld across the tension flange places a sharp stress-raising notch at precisely the most heavily loaded fibre of the girder. The weld toe at the cover-plate end is both the point of highest tension and, here, the site of pre-existing hydrogen cracks. The structure thus carried, from the day it opened, a population of cracks sitting at a stress concentration in a notch-sensitive steel. Three of the classic ingredients of brittle fracture — flaw, tensile stress, and a low-toughness material — were assembled and welded in place. Only the fourth, low temperature, had to arrive on its own schedule.
The Failure Sequence — Cold Morning, Heavy Load, Running Crack
The morning of 10 July 1962 supplied the missing ingredient. Melbourne winter mornings sit near the temperature at which notch-sensitive carbon steels of that era transition from tough to brittle, where the same flaw that yields harmlessly in summer can run as a fast fracture instead. At about 11 o'clock a low-loader and trailer — roughly 17 tons unladen carrying some 28 tons of load, about 47 tons gross and still within the bridge's posted limit — drove onto the western carriageway from the South Melbourne side.
The added live load raised the tensile stress in the bottom flanges of the suspended span. At the weld toes terminating the cover plates, where cracks already waited, the combined dead-load, residual, and live-load stress reached the critical value for the cold, notch-sensitive steel. The cracks did not tear slowly; they ran. In a low-energy brittle fracture the cracks propagated across the tension flanges and up the webs of all four suspended girders of the span — W.14-1 through W.14-4 — at a section roughly 16 feet from the southern end. With its main tension members severed almost simultaneously, the ~100-foot span lost its capacity to span and sagged about a foot, breaking up rather than folding gently.
The decisive feature of the sequence is its speed and its lack of warning. A ductile failure deforms visibly and audibly first, giving time to clear the deck; a brittle fracture in cold notch-sensitive steel is effectively instantaneous and silent. There was no progressive sag, no creaking yield, no margin in which the load could be removed. What saved life was not the structure but circumstance: the span dropped only about a foot rather than into the river, and no one happened to be in the wrong place. The bridge handed Melbourne a textbook brittle fracture and, by luck alone, presented no bill in casualties.
The Reckoning — A Commission, a Mechanism, and a Lesson in Welding
The Victorian Government convened a Royal Commission into the Failure of King's Bridge in September 1962 under the chairmanship of Sir George Barber. Over 71 sitting days it heard 45 witnesses and received 237 exhibits, dissecting the design, the steel, the welding, the inspection, and the conduct of every party — Hardcastle & Richards, Utah, Johns & Waygood, BHP, and the Country Roads Board. Reporting in August 1963, the Commission delivered a clinical verdict: the span had failed by brittle fracture, initiating at defective welds where the cover plates terminated on the tension flanges, and propagating because the steel was notch-sensitive, hydrogen-cracked, residually stressed, insufficiently preheated, and cold.
The Commission's most pointed finding concerned competence and inspection rather than calculation. The bridge was not under-designed for its loads; it was misfabricated. The fabricator did not have the experience that welding high-tensile, high-carbon steel demanded, and the welding procedures lacked the preheat and hydrogen control that such steel required. Worse, the cracks were already present and were not detected by the inspectors of either Johns & Waygood or the Country Roads Board — the two bodies whose job was to catch exactly this defect. The fracture, in other words, was not an act of nature that overtook a sound structure but the predictable terminal event of a flawed one. Because cracking was found in girders across the bridge and not only in the four that failed, the engineers could not simply replace the broken span. They post-tensioned every girder with Freyssinet-type cables to leave no part of the steel in tension, neutralising the brittle-fracture mechanism by removing the tensile stress it required, and returned the bridge to service.
Contributing Factors
Aftermath
By the rarest of margins the toll was zero: no one died and no one was injured when a major city bridge broke up under traffic. That good fortune did not soften the engineering reckoning. The bridge was repaired by post-tensioning all of its girders with Freyssinet-type cables so that no steel remained in tension, surgically removing the stress on which brittle fracture depends, and it returned to service. The deeper consequence was professional and regulatory. King Street Bridge became the Australian textbook case of brittle fracture in welded steel, a domestic counterpart to the wartime Liberty-ship fractures and the World War II welded-bridge failures that had already taught the same lesson abroad. The Royal Commission's findings drove home that high-tensile structural steel demands controlled welding — preheat, low-hydrogen consumables, managed heat input — that fabrication detailing must avoid sharp notches at peak-tension locations, that notch toughness must be specified for the lowest service temperature, and that inspection must be directed at the specific failure mode rather than performed as a formality. The case entered Australian and international engineering curricula as the canonical demonstration that a structure can be strong enough on paper and still brittle-fracture in service. In engineering memory 'King Street' is the byword for the cold-morning brittle fracture — for a crack that sat at a weld toe from the day the bridge opened and ran, fifteen months later, the moment a heavy load and a freezing dawn arrived together.
Lessons
- Never terminate a welded attachment at the peak-tension fibre with a sharp transverse weld: detail cover plates and stiffeners so the connection does not plant a stress-raising notch where the tensile stress is highest, because that is the one place a flaw becomes a running crack.
- Treat high-tensile steel as a different material, not a stronger one: specify and enforce preheat, low-hydrogen consumables, and controlled heat input matched to its carbon and alloy content, because welding it like mild steel charges the joint with hydrogen cracks and residual stress.
- Specify and verify notch toughness at the lowest service temperature: prove the steel stays ductile on the coldest morning the structure will see, because a member that is tough in the laboratory can be brittle at dawn in winter.
- Aim inspection at the credible failure mechanism, not at the paperwork: require crack detection specifically at the weld toes and heat-affected zones where the design is vulnerable, because two layers of formal inspection that never look for the real defect catch nothing.
- Remove a fracture ingredient rather than hope they never align: where a structure carries flaw, tension, and low-toughness steel together, eliminate the tensile stress or the notch by design — as the post-tensioned repair did — instead of relying on temperature and load to stay apart.
References
- King Street Bridge (Melbourne) Wikipedia
- Report of Royal Commission into the Failure of Kings Bridge (Chairman: Sir George Barber) Royal Commission into the Failure of King's Bridge (Victoria), Report, 1963
- Fracture Analysis of King's Bridge, Melbourne ASCE, Journal of the Structural Division (vol. 97, no. 9, 1971)
- Northbank Heritage Trail, Stop 10: King Street Bridge Melbourne Maritime Heritage Network