Tag Archive for Design-Build News

Design-Build work goes to Indiana where the laws permit it

MADISON, Ind.– Gov. Steve Beshear today joined Indiana Gov. Mitch Daniels and U.S. Secretary of Transportation Ray LaHood in a ceremonial groundbreaking for a long-awaited project to replace the aged Ohio River bridge that connects the neighbor states at Milton, Ky., and Madison, Ind.

The Milton-Madison Bridge, completed in December 1929, replaced ferries and today carries U.S. 421 over the Ohio River.  The bridge represented a leap forward in transportation but no longer meets modern standards.  The replacement bridge will be built with construction innovations that will allow completion in far less time, for far less money and with less public disruption than was first estimated.

“A bridge, by definition, transcends an obstacle that would otherwise divide people, communities – even entire states,” Gov. Beshear said. “It was a great day 81 years ago when the current Milton-Madison Bridge was opened, and the obstacle of a great river was overcome.  This is another great day as we break ground for a new bridge that will serve both our states for generations to come.”

“This is a project the community has been seeking for decades and I’m really proud of both states for providing not just a way to get it done, but in such an ingenious way,” Gov. Daniels said.  “It will be done years ahead of schedule and less expensively than previously thought. And the best thing for the towns on both sides of the river is that traffic will be disrupted for less than two weeks rather than a year.”

The project received a $20 million grant under TIGER – Transportation Investment Generating Economic Recovery, a part of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009.

“Recovery Act dollars are creating jobs and delivering projects to meet the needs of communities all around the country,” said Secretary LaHood. “The new Milton-Madison Bridge will restore full service on a critical link between Kentucky and Indiana, improving the quality of life for area residents.”

Extensive testing by Kentucky engineers determined that piers of the current steel-truss bridge are sound enough to support the new bridge – thereby reducing estimated completion time.  The decision was made to obtain contracting through Indiana, whose procurement laws permitted a “design-build” approach.

Walsh Construction Co., of LaPorte, Ind., won the contract with a low bid of $103 million – $28 million below the original estimate – thanks to a construction technique that will require closure of the bridge for only 10 days in all.

The company will build a new bridge on temporary piers alongside the old bridge.  After the deck of the old bridge has been removed and the existing piers widened, the new bridge deck will be slid into place.

Other construction proposals envisioned a bridge closure for up to a year, with ferries being used in the interim.

Ohio River Bridges Project recommends design-build

Ohio_ky_bridgeA report commissioned by The Bridges Coalition shows that the Ohio River Bridges Project can be  built with tolls for regular commuters as low as 75 cents per crossing, said David Nicklies, chairman of the nonprofit organization.

Each scenario in the report includes 75-cent tolls for regular commuters, who would have to equip their vehicles with special transponders to qualify. All other motorists would pay one-time tolls that range from $1.25 to $2, depending on how much state and federal funding the project would receive and whether it would be built using a design/build contract.

Building the project using the design/build approach rather than the conventional approach, in which one firm designs the project and another oversees construction, could save as much as 25 percent on the project’s projected $4 billion cost, Nicklies said.

Read more: Bridges can be built with 75 cent tolls, coalition says | Business First

To view an executive summary of the report, click here.

To view a fact sheet about the project, click here.

Money is flowing towards America’s leaky water infrastructure

By: David Jay Water_issue
It’s no secret that America’s water infrastructure is in a state of crisis. Water infrastructure in the US is functioning far past its designed operating life, with a water main breaking somewhere in the US about once every two minutes. All those leaky pipes waste about 1.7 trillion gallons of water a year, or about 17% of the US public water supply.

According to ITT’s recent Value of Water survey, American voters are waking up to the issue. Ninety five percent of voters rate water as “extremely important,” more important than services like heat or energy. 80 percent stated that water infrastructure was in need of reform, and 63 percent stated that they would pay an average of 11 percent more for water to address the problem.

Charging more for water has been a hot button political issue for years, and there is a big gap between accepting a rate increase on a survey and accepting one in real life. Still, the survey indicates that consumers are willing to spend dollars and exert political muscle to keep water clean and reliable, as illustrated by this recent PSA:

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The delicate balance between design and build

by Ben Sauer DesignVsBuild

There are some projects where significant design input is not required in the early stages. Perhaps the project is at such an early stage that you don’t even know whether the idea will fly.

Perhaps you’re trying to save money and just put something out there quickly, especially if the scope is fairly limited. To quote a startup guy I know: “I generally introduce (visual) designers to a new project pretty late, they cause big delays if they’re involved too early”. I have experienced this phenomenon: it wasn’t that design was unhelpful, we just did too much of it for an untested idea.

However, there’s a big risk involved that I’ve seen play out a number of times. Perhaps fundamental design flaws were built into the project, and it grew before anyone had a chance to ask critical questions. The structure of the product might be inappropriate, or the interface lacks consistency. In the race to get something working, the focus on actual use has been lost.

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8 trends in hospital design and development

Written by Molly Gamble

Proficient healthcare design gives hospitals the buildings and framework to help them gain Cincinnati_childrens_hospital efficiency and avoid risks associated with healthcare reform. Doug Strout, healthcare practice leader for KMD Architects, explains recent trends in hospital design along with tips for hospitals considering future development.

1. Design-build is a cost-effective, time-saving delivery method.
Traditionally, architects and engineers designed and documented instructions for contractors to build, a project delivery system known as design-bid-build. General contractors bid for the work and came in on the project after the design had been established. With the design-build process, however, contractors and architectural/engineering design teams combine forces to collaborate on design and construction. This approach, called a turnkey delivery method, is meant to reduce the time-cost and financial burdens of the project. “This will become more frequent since hospitals are looking for opportunities or delivery methods that allow them to have what they need sooner and with less cost,” says Mr. Strout. The Surgery/Emergency Replacement Project at Harbor-UCLA Medical Center in Torrance, Calif., is a current KMD project being designed and constructed via design-build delivery method.

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2010 Design-Build Award Winners Announced

The Madison in Covington, Kentucky was the setting for our 6th annual awards banquet.  There were more than sixty guests present to receive their design-build awards.   All projects were showcased in brief videos.  (View them at http://www.ovrdbia.org/awards/)

Dr. Story Musgrave shared some fantastic stories at our annual awards banquet.  He focused on the need to set standards and focus on the details of the job that needs to be done.   

Congratulations and Thank You o everyone involved in this design-build awards competition.  It was a big success!

  

  

New Inner Belt Bridge in Cleveland will be built year earlier than expected

Lacyjpg-a7a740c6e548b89f CLEVELAND, Ohio — The new Inner Belt Bridge will open a year earlier than expected and cost $163 million less than estimated.

That’s the commitment by Walsh Construction of Chicago, which along
with design firm HNTB of Kansas City are the apparent winners of the
contract to build the span across the Cuyahoga Valley.

Walsh, which received the most public support for its open, lacy
steel design, received the highest scores on its proposal and submitted a
bid of $287.4 million to build the five-lane span just north of the current Inner Belt Bridge.

Construction will begin next year. The bridge is now scheduled to open in fall 2013.

Ohio Department of Transportation officials announced the
team Thursday after opening the bids and using a formula to combine them
with the score given to each team’s technical proposal. The scores were
determined after ODOT and Cleveland officials spent five weeks
reviewing the technical proposals, which included the design for the
steel-girder bridge.

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D/B contract awarded for Cleveland’s new Innerbelt Bridge

Design firm HNTB, Kansas City, Mo., and contractor Walsh Construction,
Chicago, have been awarded a design-build contract from the Ohio Dept.
of Transportation to construct the first of two new spans that together
will become Cleveland’s new Innerbelt Bridge. The twin-structure bridge
will replace the existing 51-year-old, single-structure Innerbelt
Bridge, which will be demolished. The firms’ work on the five-lane
$278.4-million first span is expected to begin next spring and be
completed by fall 2013. Construction of the eastbound section will be a
separate contract awarded after the westbound span is completed.

W.Va. U.S. 35 toll road takes a key step forward

BECKLEY, W.Va. — Construction to make U.S. 35 a toll road took a key
step forward Thursday with passage of
Tollroad_large a legal agreement between West
Virginia’s Parkways Authority and Division of Highways to operate the
new turnpike.

Approved unanimously by the authority, the memorandum of understanding
spells out the nuts and bolts of how the two agencies will cooperatively
operate the proposed 31.88-mile toll road through Putnam and Mason
counties.

“We’re moving forward,” Parkways General Manager Greg Barr said after the meeting at the Tamarack conference center.

Much still has to happen for the toll road to become a reality,
including getting endorsements for the project from a local citizen
advisory committee and from the two county commissions. That’s expected
to occur during meetings scheduled over the next two weeks.

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Cleveland Innerbelt Bridge designs – which do you like?

The Innerbelt Bridge is a vital link into downtown
Cleveland.  In October 2008, ODOT engineers restricted traffic on the
50-year-old bridge after inspections revealed that a number of steel members
were aging faster than expected.  As part of ODOT’s Innerbelt Bridge
Safety Plan, after detailed analysis of the structure and subsequent repairs,
ODOT reopened all lanes and ramps on the bridge in November 2009.  Heavy
truck traffic is no longer restricted, however it is suggested that
trucks in the eastbound direction remain detoured via I-490 eastbound and
I-77 northbound in order to increase traffic flow efficiencies. 
Minor steel repairs will continue through the fall of 2010.  During
the spring of 2009 ODOT announced plans to construct a new $450 million
westbound Innerbelt Bridge, utilizing federal transportation stimulus funds
made available through the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act.

Three designs are available to view and offer comments. 

View the details at http://www.dot.state.oh.us/projects/ClevelandUrbanCoreProjects/Innerbelt/InnerbeltBridge/Pages/defaultwp-content/uploads/2011/05spx

Comment on the designs at http://www.dot.state.oh.us/projects/ClevelandUrbanCoreProjects/Innerbelt/InnerbeltBridge/Pages/DesignBuildCommentRegistrationwp-content/uploads/2011/05spx

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