A major artery in
the heart of Chicago is undergoing double-deck surgery, bolstered
by a special concrete mix designed to keep Wacker Drive from
crumbling for the next generation.
HISTORICAL
Once supported on timber and steel (above), Wacker
Drive will be reborn as high-performance concrete showcase.
(Photo courtesy of Chicago Dept. of Transportation)
The two-mile-long, double-deck
viaduct section being rebuilt carries about 60,000 vehicles
a day. Eight bascule bridges intersect with the upper roadway,
as do two elevated transit linesand 60,000 pedestrians
on the Loop. Hammered by Chicago's brutal weather, the original
road "was falling apart" from freeze-thaw cycles,
road salts and wear, says Denise Casalino, assistant project
director for the city's Dept. of Transportation. Despite a
1970s patch-up, the deck continued to show failures, forcing
a 15-ton limit on the roadway.
The reborn Wacker Drive is expected
to hold up much more sturdily for the next 75 years. Chicago
DOT hopes to echo some of the construction achievements in
the drive's past by utilizing special building methods and
a premium mix of high-performance concrete that emphasizes
durability.
TIGHT
FIT Columns are built beneath active elevated tracks
while allowing crossover traffic. (Photo courtesy of Chicago
Dept. of Transportation)
In the mid-1990s, the city conducted
a three-year study, finding substandard merge lanes, clearances
and intersections (ENR 3/30/98 p. 16). The project received
federal funding, $10.5 million in federal discretionary aid
and a research grant for high-performance concrete mixes.
Walsh Construction, Chicago,
holds all three contracts on the reconstruction, divided into
sections of $75 million, $43 million and $55 million. The
entire two-year project is on schedule for completion by November,
says David Hurley, Walsh senior project manager. Contract
A, for the $75-million, 2,065-ft-long middle section, is nearing
completion and will be open to traffic by Halloween, says
Hurley.
The contractor faces $30,000
a day in liquidated damages if it fails to meet various milestones.
Fifty-seven high-rise buildings flank the drive, and the lower
road provides access for service vehicles. Temporary shoring
for construction impedes service entrances, so meeting the milestones
is especially crucial.
Walsh has avoided penalties so
far and is aiming for a $1-million early completion bonus,
says Kevin J. Fitzpatrick, project construction manager for
construc- tion manager Alfred Benesch & Co. There are
$500,000 in change orders but the job is only 1% over budget,
he says. There are no major claims.
The city had never used an outside
CM before, notes Fitzpatrick. But due to Wacker Drive's high
profile, the city wanted its resident engineers to deal with
onsite issues and let Benesch managers handle cost, submittal
and coordination issues. Weekly meetings to discuss weekend
closures and milestones helped ease the pain for local businesses.
The CM had five days to answer design questions.
"It was challenging
to fit into the role, working with consultants that we might
otherwise compete against," notes Timothy P. Schmidt,
a Benesch quality assurance engineer. "The city kept
the designers involved even into the construction phase."
Because of the uncommon use of post-tensioned design and a
novel concrete mix, "it was nice to have the consultants
available," he says. Long Beach, Calif-based Earth Tech
served as lead designer, with J. Muller Internationalacquired
last year by Earth Techserving as lead bridge designer.
IN THE MIX. The project features
the first major high-performance concrete (HPC) mix in the
state, says Stan Kaderbek, deputy chief commissioner for the
city DOT's bureau of bridges and transit. When the agency
was studying options for Wacker Drive, he read about New York
state colleagues using HPC. "It seemed tailor-made for
our environment," he says. Click
here to view illustration of the project
Local firm Wiss Janney Elstner
Associates Inc. researched HPC mixes used in other states.
Working with the University of Illinois at Chicago, WJE developed
and tested performance criteria for the project. "A lot
of the HPC in the past has been done related to high strength,"
says Paul Krauss, senior consultant with WJE. "In this
case, that was not what we needed. HPC can be defined by durability
too....We were looking for a durable mix that can be placed
without a lot of problems."
The firm looked at some 40 projects,
different state criteria and federal guidelines. Mixes were
developed and tested for criteria including reaching 6,000
psi in 28 days, while attaining a maximum compressive strength
of 9,500 psi. "We didn't want a mix that had very, very
high strength," notes Krauss. "That can cause...cracking
tendencies and placeability issues."
Other requirements included air
voids with maximum spacings, a moderately low water/cement
ratio and consistency of aggregates, materials and admixtures
over time. "Once we had a sense of the specifications
for the HPC, we did trial batches to make sure we could achieve
those properties," says Krauss. The city then conducted
a prequalification process for concrete suppliers who could
choose from the recommended mix design or from their own.
Fourteen mixes were tested. Bridgeview, Ill-based Prairie
Group won the supply contract using the city's specs. "It's
the most difficult job we've ever done," says Gary Hall,
quality control technician for Prairie.
TRAVELER
A customized rolling framework system speeds cast-in-place
sections. (Photo courtesy of Chicago Dept. of Transportation)
Air entrapment within the mix was
particularly troubling, notes Kaderbek. "There was a
lot of rejected concrete," he says. "Prairie is
a good supplier...but they were used to producing standard
concrete. This was a challenge." The mix includes portland
cement, 10% Class F fly ash, 5% silica fume and 15% ground-granulated
blast furnace slag, says Krauss. Class F fly ash ties up alkalis
in the cements that could cause future problems and increases
impermeability, adds Jim Connolly, WJE principal.
The mix is pumped onto the deck
and placed with a finishing machine. After hardening, the
concrete is abrasively blasted. A 2.75-in.-thick latex layer
of concrete is placed on top to act as a short-term sacrificial
layer that soaks up winter road salts and chemicals. It can
easily be milled off and replaced every 25 years or so.
Hurley says 25,000 cu yd of concrete
is being poured on the job, up to 220 cu yd an hour. Pours
reached up to 240 ft long and 110 ft wide. HPC pours cannot
be done in the winter, due to quality control issues. Hurley
says the HPC mix costs about twice as much as regular concrete,
but the city hopes life-cycle cost savings will more than
make up for it. "As [the mix] ages, it will continue
to become more impermeable to chlorides," says Krauss.
MAINLINE. Some 30 million ft of
lumber and 1 million steel reinforcing rods supported the
original Wacker Drive, with about 600 caissons excavated to
an average of 95 ft. On Aug. 10, 1925, workers poured 1,080
cu yd of structural concrete in one nonstop shift, starting
at 6 a.m. and ending at 1:30 the next morning. According to
the city DOT, the feat set a record that was broken just 12
days later when crews placed the same amount in 6.5 hours
for the elevated structure.
DECK
POURS Concrete mix achieved a minimum of 6,000
psi and a maximum of 9,500 psi. (Photo courtesy of Chicago
Dept. of Transportation)
Last year, Brandenburg Industrial
Service Co., Chicago, began demolition for Contract A, pulling
out the deck, columns and original timber pilings. The segment
follows the original route and maintains some of the road's
existing foundation. Walsh value-engineered a cast-in-place
method to replace original precast segmental design when the
start of construction slipped from fall to spring (ENR 8/27
p. 14). "It saved half a million dollars for the city,"
says Hurley. Casalino adds that "December bids meant
there was no winter in which to precast."
The contractor, with local
firm Collins Engineering, developed a rolling formwork system
that moves steel falsework towers on rollers from section
to section. First, the bases of existing foundations were
chipped away to expose the rebar, which was preserved, says
Irwin Blumensaadt, city construction manager. Using decades-old
documents, "we had to assume the amounts of reinforcing
steel, then often found that the configuration was different
or the damage extensive," notes Fitzpatrick.
Once foundations were secured,
square blocks measuring 4 ft, 6 in. were placed as new caps.
When new columns were poured, crews set up shoring towers
around them to help place the steel framework for the new
deck. After the concrete was pumped in for the cast-in-place
closure pours, post-tensioned cables were pulled to 210,000
lbs of tensile force.
Each section took about 13 weeks
from demolition to reopening, says Hurley. "Concrete
pours took as little as six hours or up to 12 hours"
and were done mostly at night, to minimize traffic closures.
Eight fixed span sections of the cross streets were repaired.
The city also spent $6 million to save the historic limestone
facade from the old viaduct and reapply to the new one. The
new deck is cast with imbedded areas to receive the facade.
The remaining major piece in Contract
A is the replacement of a Chicago Transit Authority truss
bridge in March. Delgado Erectors Inc., Dolton, Ill., plans
to use a motorized cart system that can pick up a new 400-ton
steel truss and tracks together and bolt it into place with
a quarter-inch tolerance. The work is scheduled to be done
in one weekend; there is a $1,000-per-minute late penalty,
notes Hurley.
Utility relocation work cost some
$4 million, adds Hurley. This included a 24-in. water main
replacement and a new utility corridor about 5 ft wide and
5 ft deep.
HEART
OF CHICAGO Reconstruction of Wacker Drive is flanked
by high rise buildings and river. (Photo courtesy of Chicago
Dept. of Transportation)
Contracts B and C call for construction
of new columns and new, relocated foundations to replace the
monolithically poured deck and original octagon- shaped columns.
Work started in October on contract B, the $43-million, 1,000-ft-long
section, using steel ribs to transfer loads onto the new columns,
not the beams. The new post-tensioned concrete allows for
a thinner deck, widening clearances by about 10 ft.
Demolition has just begun for
the 1,400-ft, $55-million C contract, which shifts the viaduct
about 40 ft to modify its sharp curve. "Some of the most
intensive work is on the C contract," says Hurley, noting
that the curve doesn't allow for traveling formwork. When
done, the drive will have two 11-ft lanes and a 10-ft turn
lane in each direction, meeting FHWA standards.
Kaderbek says the city is standardizing
the HPC design for more bridge decks. Krauss adds "reviews
have been excellent....This particular mix should not be blindly
applied to other decks, but the ideas would be similar."
Chicago officials plan post-Wacker
Drive reconstruction development of the riverfront, including
reconfiguring the interchange with Interstate 290. On the
lower roadway, the city is continuing a study on construction
of a row of shops and a floating riverwalk. Ideally construction
would begin in 2003, says Kaderbek.Click
here to view Wacker Drive Rendering
• December 28 Issue
• December 7 Ad Close
Stay top of mind in print and online to the owners, engineers and contractors you need to reach.
Get connected today by contacting your account manager, call: 800-458-3842 or