Design Skill Key in St. Louis Highway Redo Award
The importance of design ingenuity is evident in the winning
proposal for the $535 million reconstruction of a 10.5-mi.-long
segment of Interstate 64 in St. Louis.
A joint venture named Gateway Constructors was recently selected
as the project's design-build contractor, said Linda Wilson,
community relations manager in the St. Louis Area District
of the Missouri Department of Transportation, the state agency
overseeing the work. Gateway is led by Watsonville, Calif.-based
Granite Construction Co. and includes local team members Fred
Weber Inc. of Creve Coeur and Millstone-Bangert Inc. of St.
Charles.
Because of the project's complexity, Missouri officials sought
the best design ideas to maximize funding.
As a result, Missouri highway specifications were not required
in proposals. Standards from other state agencies could be
proposed provided they had previously received the approval
of the American Association of State Highway Transportation
Officials or the Federal Highway Administration.
"They could propose California bridges, Texas barrier
walls, Missouri pavement and someone else's signs," Wilson
said. "We wanted to provide them the flexibility to mix
and match good standards that maybe they had used in other
states."
For instance, the Gateway proposal calls for a concrete pavement
with 45-year design life that is expected to need a single
maintenance application in 25 years. Meantime, the competing
team put forward a plan for an asphalt pavement with 45-year
design life that would have needed two maintenance applications-one
after 15 years and another after 30 years.
The project is the first highway project in the state to use
the design-build delivery method.
The project on the east-west thoroughfare covers I-64 between
Kingshighway Boulevard on the east in the city and Spoede
Road in St. Louis County on the west.
Construction will start in spring 2007, though no specific
day has been set, Wilson said. Lanes are expected to reopen
on Dec. 31, 2009, though contract completion is anticipated
on July 31, 2010.
In addition to the rebuilt pavement, bridges and each of the
12 interchanges will be reconstructed. One lane will be added
in each direction.
Reconstruction is necessary because I-64, which was originally
built piecemeal as U.S. Route 40 between the 1930s and 1960s,
can no longer handle today's traffic volume without significant
delay. The segment, which handles an average of 170,000 vehicles
daily, was designed for a maximum speed of only 45 mph.
"It's pretty much always full of cars," Wilson added.
Motorist safety is also a concern due in part to the "extremely
tight" clover-leaf ramps from previous design eras, she
said. Some ramps are signed as low as 15 mph.
Twenty-four existing bridges will be rebuilt because they
are deteriorating. In addition, five new ramps at the I-64/Interstate
170 interchange will also be constructed.
The segment from project's western end to its midway point
will be shut completely in 2008. The following year, the segment
from midway point to the eastern end will be closed in full.
Missouri Winner Expected to Maintain Bridges for 25 Years
The Missouri Department of Transportation has short-listed
four teams, from whom it received Statements of Qualification
to compete for the contract to design, build, finance and
maintain more than 800 Missouri bridges.
The short-listed teams are as follows:
Advanced Bridge Infrastructure; major participants: Bilfinger
Berget BOT Inc.; Parsons Transportation Group Inc.; VMS Inc.;
and DEPFA Bank Plc.
Missouri Bridge Partners; major participants: Zachry American
Infrastructure; Infrastructure Corporation of America; HNTB
Corporation; Clarkson Construction, Inc.; Fred Weber Inc.;
URS Corporation; and CONTECH Bridge Solutions
Team United: major participants: United Contractors; Cramer/United/Jensen
JV; APAC-Missouri; RBC Dain Rauscher; Wachovia Capital Markets;
LPA Group
Partnership Missouri: major participants: Transfield Services;
CH2M Hill; Macquarie Investment Holdings; DMJM Harris/AECOM;
HDR; Emery Sapp & Sons; The Vandiver Group.
Gov. Matt Blunt and MoDOT Director Pete Rahn unveiled the
Safe & Sound Bridge Improvement Program in September as
a way to improve the condition of more than 800 of the state's
worst bridges by the end of 2012.
The team selected will determine the improvement strategy
for each structure.
Using the design-build project delivery method, the team selected
will be expected to bring innovation to the project in order
to save time and resources. Additionally, the team is being
asked to finance the project and to maintain the program's
bridges for at least 25 years.
New INDOT Technology Helps Contractors
Deliver Major Moves
The Indiana Department of Transportation has announced contract
information, construction plans and notices of revisions will
be downloadable from from the INDOT Web site.
Posting project plans online will help contractors meet the
increased demand for construction as INDOT ramps up construction
to deliver Governor Mitch Daniels' $12 billion Major Moves
plan. Major Moves fully funds more than 200 construction and
200 major highway preservation projects across Indiana over
the next 10 years.
The new online system will allow contractors to receive plans
more quickly and with less hassle. Contractors can download
plans off the Web site immediately and at no cost.
The new online plan system is currently in a "live test"
mode and plans are available while the new site is being fine-tuned.
Plans on the site are searchable by document category, contract
number, INDOT district, letting date and designation number.
Anyone interested in viewing and downloading plans can find
them by going to www.in.gov/dot/div/contracts/letting/index.html
and clicking on the link "Contract Information Book,
Construction Plans, Notice of Revisions and Revised Wage Rates."
2006: Record Year for Transportation
The 2006 U.S. transportation construction market was the
most robust in more than 20 years with the value of work
on highways, bridges, airports and transit systems up 15
percent over the last year, according to the Washington,
D.C.-based American Road & Transportation Builders Association.
Fueled by increased federal, state and local highway investments,
a $2.3 billion congressional appropriation for repair work
on highways damaged by
Hurricane Katrina and greater investments in freight rail,
the total value of construction performed on transportation
projects was expected to hit a record $106 billion in 2006,
up from $92 billion in 2005, said ARTBA Vice President of
Economics and Research William Buechner.
Highway and bridge construction provided much of the driving
force for the 2006 growth. The value of construction work
on highways and bridges grew almost $11 billion-or 16 percent,
to $76.3 billion-the largest increase since 1984, when Congress
was funding extra highway construction to help end a severe
recession.
Some of the increased spending reflected higher construction
costs, particularly for asphalt, cement and aggregates.
But, even after accounting for higher costs, the real increase
in highway and bridge construction was a robust eight percent
or more, Buechner said.
Unlike 2005 and 2006, when rising construction costs ate
up part of the dollar increase in highway construction spending,
the purchasing power of construction budgets in 2007 may
get an unexpected boost from declining construction material
costs.
The 2005-06 inflation in highway construction costs appears
to be slowing and may be ending. Falling petroleum prices
are bringing down asphalt costs while the growth of worldwide
cement capacity may help stabilize the cost of ready-mix
concrete. The Producer Price Index for highway construction
materials fell in August and September. If costs stay down,
construction dollars in 2007 would buy more construction
than in 2006.
Buechner forecasts modest growth in the range of one to
two percent for the U.S. highway and bridge construction
market in 2007. His forecast for other transportation modes:
Airports: After the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks,
airport construction fell due to less air travel and the
diversion of federal airport construction funds to enhance
airport security.
These trends have now been reversed. As a result, the value
of construction work on airport runways and related projects
grew 18 percent in 2005 to $5.8 billion and should grow
to about $6 billion in 2006.
For 2007, increased federal funding for airport construction
plus increased revenues from Passenger Facility Charges
and excise user fees should push airport construction to
more than $6 billion. New contracts awarded for airport
construction are up 23 percent so far in 2006, supporting
an outlook for continued growth.
Subway and Light Rail: The value of construction
work performed on subway and light rail projects has hovered
around $3.5 billion for the last five years. A number of
major projects are in line for federal financing in FY 2007,
but the impact on construction probably won't occur until
2008 and later. ARTBA expects no breakout from the $3.5
billion construction level in 2007.
Freight Rail: The value of construction work performed
on freight rail is on track to total $7.9 billion in 2006,
up more than 20 percent from $6.6 billion in 2005. Rail
construction is largely privately financed and is driven
by the volume of freight traffic. As long as the economy
keeps growing, this market should also grow.
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