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Top Infrastructure Projects
Road Projects Keeping Builders Busy
by George Bukota
Bridges lead the way among the largest infrastructure projects
in Oregon and Washington.
The monster among the projects is Washington's new Tacoma
Narrows Bridge on State Route 16. The $849 million, nearly
six-year project is so large and complex that the general
contractors Bechtel and Kiewit Pacific have named their joint
venture Tacoma Narrows Constructors.
The other leading bridge projects in the region include Washington
State Route 104/Hood Canal Bridge East Half at $204 million,
Portland's St. Johns Bridge at $30.9 million, the McKenzie
and Willamette Bridges on Interstate 5 near Eugene at $28.9
million and the Broadway Bridge over the Willamette river
in Portland at $21.3 million.
Here is a rundown on the region's top transportation projects
in Oregon and Washington.
Oregon
St. Johns Bridge
Portland
St. Johns Bridge leads the Oregon Department of Transportation
project list at $30.98 million. General contractor Max J.
Kuney Construction of Spokane, Wash., is restoring and rehabilitating
the 72-year-old bridge over the Willamette River in Portland
by replacing deck and sidewalks, refurbishing the railing,
replacing deck joints and frozen bearings and improving Bridge
Avenue ramps on the river's west side.
The project began in March 2003 and is scheduled for completion
in 2005.
Interstate 5 at McKenzie and Willamette
Rivers
Eugene
Detour bridges over the McKenzie and Willamette rivers on
Interstate 5 near Eugene are budgeted at $28.9 million by
general contractor Hamilton Construction of Springfield, Ore.
The temporary bridges are designed to carry all I-5 traffic,
including full-weight trucks, across the rivers as the original
bridges are replaced.
Shear cracks throughout reinforced concrete beams supporting
the decks of both bridges have forced a ban on heavy trucks
since February 2003. Detours caused by the bridge weight restrictions
have cost truckers an extra $38,000 a day in added transportation
costs, Oregon Department of Transportation officials estimate.
The Willamette River span will be a 78-ft.-wide, four-lane
bridge built east of the existing bridge. It will be 1,990
ft. long and only 50 ft. high. It is being built for a 10-year
lifespan.
The temporary two-lane McKenzie River Bridge will carry southbound
traffic and be built between the existing bridges. The existing
northbound bridge will be strengthened to carry normal loads
while both north- and southbound bridges are rebuilt.
Both bridges are on a fast-track schedule and being built
under a contract that rewards Hamilton Construction for work
completed ahead of schedule, and penalizes it for delays.
Hamilton bid the job for 352 days, less than the state's
estimate of 409 days, and it is scheduled to end in September,
said Hamilton's Jim Sly Hamilton, operations manager and project
manager for the bridges.
The Wildish Group (Wildish Standard Paving of Eugene) is
Hamilton's major subcontractor on the project.
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Crews set the columns at Bent 2
on the Willamette Bridge.
(Photo courtesy of Hamilton) |
Interstate 205 Sunnybrook Interchange, Phase One
Portland
Interstate 205 Sunnybrook Interchange, phase one, is a major
rebuild of one of the heaviest-used intersections in the Portland
area. Hamilton Construction also is handling this $21.3 million
project, and Jim Sly Hamilton is the project manager.
The new six-lane overpass will carry Sunnybrook Boulevard
traffic over I-205 and provide full freeway interchange with
exits to Sunnyside Road. The project includes a new structure
over I-205 at Sunnybrook Boulevard near Portland's Town Center.
It includes two eastbound, two westbound and a dual left-turn
lane for on-ramp and collector/distributor road access; reconfiguring
on- and off-ramps; building collector/distributor roads and
auxiliary lanes; building retaining and sound walls; and rebuilding
a bicycle/pedestrian path. The project also includes repaving
2 mi. of the freeway.
Hamilton took over the original contract nine months after
it was started. Although the original completion date of fall
2004 was unchanged, Hamilton and the Wildish Group (Wildish
Standard Paving of Eugene), the major subcontractor, have
completed the major work, with only some lighting and landscaping
work to finish.
Broadway Bridge
Portland
Willamette River (Broadway) Bridge in Portland is being refurbished
by Mowat Construction of Woodinville, Wash., for $21.3 million.
Corrosion due to failing 40-year-old lead-base paint is a
major problem for the Multnomah County-owned 92-year-old bridge,
one of the oldest surviving Rall-mechanism double-leaf bascule
bridges and, at 1,613 ft. long, the world's largest.
The ongoing rehabilitation includes removing loose paint,
replacing failing structural members and repainting about
one-third of the bridge above the deck. There also will be
below-deck repainting, replacing the steel lift span deck
grating, rehabilitation of concrete bridge deck and replacing
sidewalks.
The project is scheduled for completion in late 2004 or early
2005.
Interstate 5 Marquam Bridge
Portland
Interstate 5 Marquam Bridge to Capitol Highway Section is
a 6.37-mi., $21.2 million project that has J.C. Compton Contractor
of McMinnville, Ore., raising one under-height overpass; repairing
concrete roadway damage; upgrading concrete barrier, curb
and attenuators; replacing ramp meter loop detectors; and
adding new reflective lane-marking striping.
This section of I-5 is cracked and badly rutted from more
than a dozen years of heavy traffic. In some areas, wheel
ruts are nearly an inch deep. Repaving will reduce the clearance
of the SW Spring Garden overcrossing structure even farther
below federal recommended height standards, so Compton will
raise the structure by about 17 in.
The project is slated for completion in spring 2005.
Washington
New Tacoma Narrows Bridge
Tacoma
The new Tacoma Narrows Bridge on State Route 16 is the biggest
animal in the pack of bridge work. The new $849 million suspension
bridge, being built south of the existing bridge, is scheduled
to open in 2007.
The design-builder is Tacoma Narrows Constructors, a Gig
Harbor, Wash.,-based joint venture of Bechtel Infrastructure
Corp. of Nevada and Kiewit Pacific Co. of Delaware.
The current Tacoma Narrows Bridge, opened in 1950 to replace
the infamous "Galloping Gertie," was designed to
carry 60,000 cars a day and now carries nearly 90,000 daily.
The new 5,400-ft.-long parallel suspension bridge will provide
three lanes for eastbound traffic, plus shoulders and a separate
bicycle/pedestrian path. Its towers and foundations are designed
to carry a second deck for added traffic capacity, if needed.
With its center-span length of 2,800 ft., the new structure
will be the longest suspension bridge built in the United
States since New York's Verrazano Narrows Bridge opened in
1964.
The project includes a 3.4-mi. segment of SR-16 from Tacoma's
Jackson Avenue interchange to west of 36th Street NW. The
segment includes new split-diamond interchanges at 24th and
36th Streets NW in western Pierce County.
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Shoreline concrete pumps push concrete
over 2,000 ft. to a placement barge anchored in the Narrows
during construction of the new Tacoma Narrows Bridge.
From there, two 125-ft. booms place the concrete into
the caisson walls.
(Photo by Duncan Livingston for Tacoma Narrows Constructors) |
Hood Canal Bridge
Kitsap and Jefferson Counties
The Hood Canal Bridge, East Half, on State Route 104 is Washington's
second-largest infrastructure project this year at $204 million.
The project replaces the floating eastern half and repairs
the western half of this 42-year-old link between the Olympic
Peninsula and the central Puget Sound region.
The project includes new approach sections and transition
truss spans on both ends of the bridge and also widening of
the western half to provide continuous 8-ft. shoulders for
vehicle breakdown and cyclist/pedestrian safety.
General contractor Kiewit-General, a Port Angeles, Wash.,-based
joint venture of Kiewit Pacific Co and General Construction
Co., aims to complete the project by the end of 2007 as targeted,
although some of the work is behind schedule because an archeological
site was uncovered..
The contractors and the Washington State Department of Transportation
are consulting with Lower Elwah Klallam Tribe officials and
federal highway and state historic preservation officials
to develop plans to recover archeological and tribal items
during construction.
State Route 18, Maple Valley to Issaquah/Hobart
Road
Maple Valley
Maple Valley to Issaquah/Hobart Road on State Route 18 is
being widened to four lanes in a $55.9 million project by
Guy F. Atkinson Construction of Renton, Wash.
The 3.7-mi. project, part of an overall plan to expand the
SR-18 corridor between Auburn and Interstate 90 to four lanes,
will include a new interchange replacing the signaled intersection
at 244th Avenue SE, replacement of the at-grade SE 200th Street
intersection with a bridge over SR-18 and removal of an at-grade
intersection at SE 236th Street.
To handle now-untreated runoff, the project includes the
rebuilding of 14 stormwater mitigation ponds, an additional
49.3 acres of wetland mitigation and seven bridges to handle
road crossings of Taylor Creek and its tributaries.
This segment of the SR-18 project is due to be completed
by fall 2006.
Interstate 405 Improvements
Bellevue
Interstate 405 Downtown Bellevue Direct Access improvements
at NE Fourth and NE Sixth streets will add a new interchange
at NE Sixth Street, giving buses and car- and vanpools direct
access from I-405 HOV lanes to the expanded Bellevue Transit
Center.
That project is scheduled for completion by early 2005.
In addition, general contractor Guy F. Atkinson Construction
has removed and is rebuilding the NE Fourth Street overpass
to provide an addition lane on NE 4th and allow for future
expansion of I-405. The rebuilt overpass is raised to accommodate
the NE Sixth Street HOV/transit ramp.
Collector/distributor lanes and ramps will be realigned to
minimize the number of ramps merging on and off the freeway.
State Route 519/Interstate 90 Intermodal
Access
Seattle
State Route 519/Interstate 90 Intermodal Access, phase one,
at South Atlantic Street in Seattle is a $32.9 million project
to upgrade SR-519 (South Royal Brougham Way) for improved
connections for ferry and freight traffic to Port of Seattle
terminals and the Seattle Waterfront area.
While most of the planned work in done, some drainage and
added work needs to be completed, said Julia Mizuhata, Washington
Department of Transportation project engineer. The job is
targeted for completion by the end of May, she said.
The first phase of the project, by Balfour Beatty Construction
of Pacific, Wash., included a structure that separates vehicle,
pedestrian and rail traffic near Safeco Field to improve flow
and reduce accidents. It also included a new on-ramp to I-90
and I-5, and a new pedestrian plaza between Third and Fourth
avenues beneath the structure.
The new South Atlantic Street ramp will give westbound traffic
an alternate route for South Royal Brougham Way, which is
often stopped for trains.
At a Glance
Top Oregon and Washington Road Projects
Oregon
- St. Johns Bridge
$30.98 million
Max J. Kuney Co., Spokane, Wash.
- Interstate 5: McKenzie and Willamette Bridges
$28.9 million
Hamilton Construction, Springfield, Ore.
- Interstate 205 Sunnybrook Interchange, phase one
$21.3 million
Hamilton Construction, Springfield, Ore.
- Willamette River (Broadway) Bridge
$21.3 million
Mowat Construction, Woodinville, Wash.
- Interstate 5: Marquam Bridge, Capitol Highway Section
$21.4 million
J.C. Compton Contractor, McMinnville, Ore.
Washington
- State Route 16, New Tacoma Narrows Bridge
$849 million
Tacoma Narrows Constructors, Gig Harbor, Wash.
- State Route 104, Hood Canal Bridge, East Half
$204 million
Kiewit-General, Port Angeles, Wash.
- State Route 18, Maple Valley to Issaquah/Hobart Road
$55.9 million
Guy F. Atkinson Construction, Renton, Wash.
- Interstate 405, Bellevue Downtown Direct Access (NE Fourth
and NE Sixth streets)
$44.2 million
Guy F. Atkinson Construction, Renton, Wash.
- State Route 519/Interstate 90 Intermodal Access, phase
one (South Atlantic Street)
$32.9 million
Balfour Beatty Construction, Pacific, Wash.
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