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Standing on a barge
cruising through the Panama Canal's Gaillard Cut, Maximiliano
DePuy beams proudly. The geotechnical engineer for the Panama
Canal Authority points to the 539-ft-high Gold Hill promontory
on one side of the waterway, from which 75 ft of rock has
been cut out since 1986. On the opposite bank looms Contractor's
Hill, already reduced to 370 ft in previous work. Stabilizing
the canal's landslide-prone slopes metaphorically represents
protecting a precious pathway for Panama, owner of the 51.2-mile-long
construction landmark since 2000, when the U.S. turned it
over to the locally run Panama Canal Authority.
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| THEN AND NOW
Original widening in 1930s of
canal's Gaillard Cut (top) will be expanded in new program
(bottom). (Photo courtesy of Panama Canal Authority) |
That "path between the
seas," as historian David McCullough's epic book describes
the Panama Canal, is headed for a new chapter in its colorful
88-year history as it strives to become a popular travel spot
and maintain a pivotal role as a shipping and maritime nexus.
A $1-billion infrastructure investment program may culminate
with a final decision to build a new set of locks. Trains
are set to run on a rebuilt railroad paralleling the canal,
and design is under way for a second bridge over it. Private
owners are overseeing expansion of major ports on either end,
while Panama's public works ministry plans a light rail system
to link planned real estate developments.
Opened to shipping in 1914, the
canal now handles a daily average of 38 vessels that are raised
and lowered on the Atlantic Ocean side by the massive 2-kilometer-long
Gatun Locks and, at the Pacific, the Pedro Miguel and Miraflores
Lock. Construction of the canal, first considered by the Spanish
in 1534, then attempted in 1880 by France and finally undertaken
by the U.S. in 1903 for 10 years, has been well-documented.
Now the story continues.
FUTURE. Plans for the canal's
future "keep growing and growing," notes Agustin
Arias, canal capacity project manager. The canal can accommodate
ships up to 106 ft wide, the so-called new generation of larger
"post-Panamax" vessels. Spurred by growth in their
use, the government has a $1-billion program to increase capacity
from 14,000 vessels a year to 16,000. That includes buying
$54 million of new lock locomotives, new tracks and tugboats,
conversion of miter gate locks to hydraulics and a $30-million
global positioning vessel tracking system.
The
existing 8.5-mile Gaillard Cut is being widened from 500 ft
to a maximum of 730 ft to allow two-way passage of the bigger
ships and to decrease the average 30-hour total canal travel
time, including waiting, by about six hours. The cut, which
crosses the Continental Divide, is prone to landslides, notes
Luis Alfaro, the authority's engineering director. A landslide
control program in place since 1968 monitors slope movements.
"There have been only two large slides since then,"
he says. "Hundreds of others were averted."
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| RAIL
RENEWAL Rebuilt Panama
Canal Railways stretches across length of country. (Photo
courtesy of Panama Canal Railway Authority) |
The $219-million widening, approved
in 1991, consists of 18 contracts and should be complete by
next year, says Alfaro. In 1996, the government decided to
speed the program by 10 years by adding cutter section dredging
to existing bucket dipping dredging. Contractors from Japan,
Costa Rica, the U.S. and elsewhere excavated about 29.2 million
cu yd of soft rock and drilled and blasted harder rock. Another
44 million cu yd was dredged. The Rialto M. Christensen, with
a 15-cu-yd bucket, is the third-largest of its type in the
world, says Alfaro. Besides the spoil, crews dredged up old
locomotives from the Panama Canal Railway, as well as vehicles,
bridge segments and remnants of towns now submerged by man-made
Gatun Lake, he notes. Ten disposal sites are located along
the canal section. When work is completed, the Gaillard Cut
will measure 630 ft wide along the straightaways and 730 ft
at the curves.
The next chapter in the canal's
construction history could be equally momentous. Bidding will
begin this summer for conceptual design of a new set of locks
that would accommodate the next generation of post-Panamax
ships, says Arias. Feasibility studies are to be completed
by the end of next year. If all goes smoothly, he adds, the
canal authority expects its post-Panamax locks to operate
in 2010. Before that, however, the canal must be assured of
adequate water resources to handle new locks. The most promising
of six options is to increase Gatun Lake's minimum 44.5-ft
depth by 3 ft. Now in final design, the plan would increase
storage capacity by six lockages a day, each equaling 55 million
gal, Arias says. The scheme could cost $190 million and take
up to eight years to finish.
The decision on whether to build
new locks will come after studies on benefits and risks, which
include construction scope and market forecasts of canal traffic.
Arias expects firm cost estimates when studies are completed
by the end of next year.
RIDING THE RAILS. Attention is
also being focused on the canal zone's little-used railway,
transferred to Panamanian control in 1979. A rail link between
the ports of Cristobal and Balboa preceded the canal by almost
60 years, built to accommodate California Gold Rush miners
from the East Coast as a faster alternative to land travel
across the U.S. or the long sail around the tip of South America.
The railroad was moved in 1909 to avoid submersion by the
new canal but it fell into disuse.
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| (Graphic
Illustration by Nancy Soulliard for ENR) |
A joint venture of Kansas City
Southern and Mi-Jack Products, Hazelcrest, Ill., is now rebuilding
the 47.6-mile route and plans to operate it under a contract
with a 25-year renewal clause, says Dave Starling, president
of the Panama Canal Railway Co. The $70-million reconstruction
is just about complete, and is expected to carry 75,000 containers
a year between Cristobal and Balboa. "We would not have
been interested in this if not for the two ports," says
Starling. The company hopes port development and the intermodal
opportunities from the double-track railway will help it strike
gold this time around. Eventually, 20 trains a day will run
on new continuously welded track widened to the U.S. standard
of 56.5 in. Starling concedes it will take more than a year
for the line to be profitable. Future phases will include
expanding up to three tracks on either side.
A
design-build team led by Neosho Construction, Topeka, Kan.,
and including Wilson & Co., Albuquerque, N.M, and local
firms, cleared jungle grass along the old line and dug up
rotted ties in often marshy conditions, surrounded by jungle
wildlife. Wilson's Mexican subsidiary, Wilson Aries Grupo
Industrial, sent Spanish-speaking workers to the site. The
contractor had to take utility lines often buried just inches
below the surface and reinstall them several feet down, says
Richard Long, Neosho project manager. "We anticipated
there would be some utilities, but we found three to four
times as much," he says. But the subgrade from the 1909
railroad proved to be in much better shape than expected,
and crews were able to continue track work through the rainy
season.
Rebuilding work includes some
20 grade crossings and a new 7.5-mile track section near Colon
to support a new container facility. Change orders of about
$10 million relating to terminal station additions were incorporated
into the contract, says Long. The last phases, including the
freight terminal in Balboa, should be done by August. One
passenger tourist train is already using the route once a
day.
Building in an area lacking local
rail expertise or materials was a challenge, says Starling.
Concrete ties were shipped from Colombia; ballast and 1,440
ft of rail came from Canada, and was welded on site. Retrofitted
locomotives and cars came from Amtrak. Politics also played
a role, when disgruntled residents of poverty-stricken Colon
blocked crews for a few days as a protest against the Panamanian
government. Long says the team hired a number of locals, but
there weren't enough jobs for everyone. "The workers
are excellent, efficient and want to work," he says.
PORTS CALL. Modernization of ocean
ports is critical to canal plans. Hutchinson Port Holdings
Group, Hong Kong, won a 25-year concession contract in 1997
to operate Balboa and Cristobal ports. Most of a $140-million
expansion program is concentrated at Balboa on the Pacific
side, since "there is literally no competition on this
side of the canal," notes Neil Proud, project manager
for Hutchinson's Panama Ports Co.
The first two phases of work at
Balboa cost $110 million and involved dredging 1 million cu
yd of earth to a 12.9-m depth to match the canal, he says.
A new 8.4-hectare container storage area equipped with three
post-Panamax cranes and six gantry cranes has nearly doubled
port capacity to some 900,000 TEUs (units equivalent to 20-ft-long
containers). Tough conditions, including soil migration and
crocodiles, and problems with rock fractures during pile-driving,
caused a year's delay for German contractor Billfinger+Berger,
says Proud. "Driven piles were not the way to go,"
he says. "Now we have a preliminary design for bored
piles" for the third phase, to be completed in 2003.
Work will involve 270 lineal m of piers, six hectares of container
storage area and dredging of canal approaches. Bids are due
by the beginning of August.
On the Atlantic side, Colon Container
Terminal SA, a subsidiary of Evergreen Marine Corp., Taiwan,
is investing $110 million in developing a marine terminal
at Cristobal. The first phase's 1,800-ft quay, four Panamax
cranes and six acres of container yard will be followed by
another quay and eventual capacity of 1 million TEUs a year.
Manzanillo International Termina-Panama SA, the local operator
of Manzanillo port, is looking at a possible second container
terminal on the Pacific side, near Balboa.
Anticipating extra traffic, the
Ministry of Public Works last December selected a joint venture
of T.Y. Lin International, San Francisco, and The Louis Berger
Group, East Orange, N.J., to design a concept for a cable-stayed
bridge over the canal, 20 km north of the steel arch Bridge
of the Americas at the Pacific portal. Final design is due
for completion by the end of this year. Panama will finance
the estimated $100-million span. "The [ministry] specifically
requested a cable-stayed bridge," says Rafael Manzanarez,
deputy technical director for T.Y. Lin. "Concrete materials
are readily available and they have the expertise locally
to do that kind of work." He adds that two main towers
will be placed to accommodate up to 120 m of future canal
widening. "We're considering cast-in-place, primarily
because we cannot use the water to bring in precast segments,"
he says.
The construction schedule
for the 420-m-long, six-lane bridge will be tight because
of Panama's rainy season, but "it's important to finish
the job within the next 30 months," adds Man-Chung Tang,
T.Y. Lin technical group director. Preliminary design is expected
next month, and "they are prequalifying contractors as
we speak." The ministry also plans to spend $35 million
on 22 km of highway at both ends of the new bridge. The new
roadway will snake through a former shooting range used by
the U.S. Army. "Unexploded shells are a possibility"
to consider for the future roadway contractor, says Tang.
The entire project should be completed by March 2004.
The bridge and accompanying
roadwork will be handled as design-build projects, although
any future light rail in the capital, Panama City, cannot
be done through build-operate-transfer schemes because resulting
fares would be too high, says Luis Blanco, public works minister.
But the ministry plans to seek bids this year for final design
and rolling stock for an initial $200-million "Blue Line."
The operations and management contract would be awarded as
a 30-year concession, but financing is not finalized. The
initial 13-km-long line would be at-grade, with 15 stations.
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| CRUISING
Panama looks to a bright economic
future with shipping and tourism facalities. (Photo by
Eliott Kaufman for ENR.) |
Colon, at the opposite end of Panama
City both economically and geographically, could benefit from
a future intermodal facility that would link the old military
airfield to the ports and rail, and spur tourist development
from cruise ships. New York City-based DMJM + HARRIS is leading
a team on a six-month study for Panama on the intermodal facility,
says Senior Vice President Ed Schmeltz. After the study, "We
plan to go forward and create a logistics platform for uniting
the elements of what's there," says Ed Boatman, a company
vice president. The work could help push Colon further into
the canal's economic sphere and make it another beneficiary
of the expansion.
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