| In
the heart of Albuquerque lies a maze of Interstate ramps known
as the "Big I," a convergence of Interstates 41 and
25. For years the bottleneck has provided a daily white-knuckled
driving experience for 300,000 motorists. But a Herculean $289-million,
24-month fast-track project has changed that.
"A lot of people said there
is no way this project can be completed in 24 months,"
says Bill Moore, project engineer for New York City-based
construction manager Parsons Brinckerhoff. The Big I opened
a month early on May 25, with less than 2% in change orders
and 2 million work hours without a lost-time accident.
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| CONNECTED
Big I is the heart of Albuquerque's business transportation.
(Photo courtesy of Twin Mountain Construction Co) |
"We compare it to open-heart
surgery, since almost all the commerce in Albuquerque travels
the Big I or is centered around it," says Allan L. Whitesel,
project director for the New Mexico State Highway and Transportation
Dept. (NMSHTD). "We had as much construction going on
in that 1-mile radius in two years as we did in one year for
the rest of the state."
"NMSHTD began the mammoth
reconstruction effort eight years ago. Traffic on the 36-year-old,
$12-million interchange stood at 90% over capacity. URS Corp.,
New York City, designed a 24-month reconfiguration with 111
new lane-miles and 55 bridges within a 1.5-mile radius."The
existing interchange was long outdated and operated very poorly,"
says Jim B. Eshbaugh, URS deputy design manager. Old right-sided
on-ramps sat next to left-sided exits, resulting in dangerously
sharp transitions. The new design for 400,000 daily vehicles
adds a sixth travel lane and creates a two-lane frontage road
system 30 ft under the Big I to carry an extra 60,000 daily
motorists each way.
Though the state legislature had
not yet approved design-build, URS sought feedback from contractors
at 65% and 90% design completion before releasing documents
for bid. NMSHTD strove to eliminate red tape. "We were
able to form a true partnership, and we did not have decisions
go up this long ladder," says state Transportation Secretary
Pete K. Rahn. .
"URS has $600,000 in potential milestone incentives related
to on-time completion. Albuquerque-based Twin Mountain Construction
II Co. held a $226.6-million contract with a $35,000-a-day
liquidated damages clause starting June 30. There was no monetary
early completion bonus, but Twin Mountain gets to keep a 15-acre
staging area for finishing on time.
"Twin Mountain had
four months to ramp up operations and begin precasting 663
concrete segments for eight flyovers while Albuquerque Underground
Inc. worked on 70 miles of utility relocation and drainage.
That $18.5-million contract included 660 drop inlets, 15 miles
of storm drain up to 84-in. dia. and 4 miles of waterline.
"Twin Mountain used
two shifts of 500 workers, 100 subs and suppliers and $36
million worth of equipment on the 240-ft-tall, five-level
interchange, rebuilding from the top down to resume traffic
as flyovers were finished. The job required 1.8 million cu
yd of excavation, four detention basins and 1.3 million cu
yd of infill. Crews built 750,000 sq ft of mechanically stabilized
earthwalls. Soft sand and decomposed bedrock required 44 piers,
each 80 ft deep and up to 10 ft dia. Crews built four steel
girder spans and 33 concrete girder spans. For the segmental
flyovers, Twin Mountain erected up to 13 segments daily, using
nine cranes and 1,500 workers at peak. The I-25 south/I-40
east flyover, 80-ft-tall and 2,800-ft-long, is the state's
longest bridge.
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| NEW
LOOK Precast flyovers and other spans reshaped
interchange (left). (Photo courtesy of Twin Mountain Construction
Co.) |
"The contractor divided
the project into quadrants and the core, tackling the work
in two phases. "If we became hung-up in one area, work
could still continue elsewhere," says Van Groves, president
of Twin Mountain. The firm kept two traffic lanes open from
5:30 a.m. to 9 p.m. daily or faced a $2,000-an hour penalty.
It missed twice, for $35,000 in damages.
"According to Rahn,
similar projects have taken three to four times as long to
build. Other highway officials ask NMSHTD how it achieved
such a feat. "The secret is pride," Rahn says. "No
one wanted to be the one who screwed it up."
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Departure
of a Highway Official Sparks Exodus of Colleagues
By Tony Illia
Peter
Rahn, a former insurance salesman who established a
reputation as a popular, progressive transportation
chief, announced his resignation from the New Mexico
State Highway and Transportation Dept. this spring-prompting
a mass exodus of key state highway officials.
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| Rahn
pioneered innovation for roads. (Photo by Tony Illia
for ENR) |
"The gubernatorial elections
coming in November fueled Rahn's decision to leave in
seven months. "These are political appointments
and the current governor is finishing his second term,"
he says. NMSHTD deputy secretaries Adolfo Lucero and
Charlie Trujillo, both 27-year veterans, consequently
have decided to retire. Rhonda Faught, NMSHTD's adjutant
secretary, plus two bureau chiefs and three division
directors, are leaving as well. Even Reuben S. Thomas,
the Federal Highway Administration's New Mexico division
administrator and a 31-year federal employee, has opted
to go. Pete Rahn's "legacy has proved that government
agencies don't have to be bureaucracies to get things
done," says Thomas. "Once you've had a taste
of that, there's no going back."
"Rahn helped
pioneer the state's use of Grant Anticipation Revenue
Vehicle bonds and private-public financing, which led
to $2.64-billion worth of projects in the state over
the last 5.5 years. Previously, New Mexico was only
meeting about 12% of its $7 billion in transportation
needs. In Rahn's seven-year tenure, the state built
570 miles of four-lane highway. And there's more to
come, including the $100-million rehabilitation of U.S.
285-84 between Santa Fe and Pojoaque.
Colleagues credit Rahn with reducing change orders by
38.8% and building performance guarantees into projects.
For example, the state's 140-mile, four-lane widening
of Highway 44 has a 20-year, $60-million warranty from
the developer-contractor Mesa PCD, a division of Koch
Materials Co., Wichita, Kan. New Mexico only pays for
road striping over a four-year period.
Rahn also pushed for a corridor
approach to highway expansion in the mid-1990s as a
way to complete projects quickly. In addition, he lobbied
the legislature to use design-build on public road projects,
the first of which is a segment of U.S. 70. "It
will be a real challenge to keep the momentum going
that [Rahn] created," says Kathie Leyendecker,
NMSHTD spokesperson. "There is a sense of apprehension
to see what will happen next."
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