REACHING
HIGH State Highway 130, well under way, is a critical
test case for alternative delivery methods.
True to its unofficial
motto, "Dont Mess With Texas," the Lone Star
State willingly bucks convention. An ambitious highway plan,
as maverick as the state itself, is proving this true. In
a time when states struggle with budget deficits, the 65-mile,
$3.6-billion Central Texas Turnpike Project could be a creative
solution and a harbinger of future roads.
The private-public design-build
program, which consists of State Highways 130 and 45 North
and Loop 1, represents a comprehensive development agreement
enabled by state legislation approved in 2001 (House Bill
3588). The experimental process allows the state to enter
into contracts with one entity to oversee everything from
construction and design to operation and maintenance.
The state operates more than 20
successful toll roads, including the Sam Houston Parkway in
Houston, President George Bush Turnpike in Dallas, and 15
toll bridges along the Mexico-U.S. border. But this is its
most ambitious plan to date. "With this project, were
sending a message," says Robert Daigh, Austin district
engineer for the Texas Dept. of Transportation. "This
is a new way of doing business that will bring other major
highway projects on line quicker."
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The central turnpikes new
roads, to be built almost 25 years faster than if by traditional
design-bid-build, will alleviate gridlock between Austin and
San Antonio. The alignment runs parallel to Interstate 35,
a heavily traveled truck route noted in the North American
Free Trade Agreement. Nearly 80% of all U.S.-Mexico trade
goes through Texas.
According to the Austin-based Texas
Public Policy Foundation, a non-profit think tank, tractor-trailers
take up 3.8 times more road than a single car. Projections
call for a 100% increase in truck traffic through Texas by
2020. "Although were a large state with a $3-billion
annual roadbuilding program, it only meets 36% of our current
transportation needs," says Phillip Russell, director
of the state Turnpike Authority Division.
The turnpike project is also a
critical test for Republican Gov. Rick Perrys Trans
Texas Corridora proposed 4,000-mile network of roads,
rail and utilities first unveiled in January 2002. That 50-year
undertaking calls for a 10-lane highway with six railroad
tracks grouped together in 1,000-ft-wide at-grade corridors,
plus underground gas, water, electric and fiber-optic lines.
The state intends to finance the corridors estimated
$180-billion price tag through bonds, federal loans, toll
revenue, ridership fees and utility easement sales.
"We must look at new ways
to finance our transportation projects," Perry says.
"The Central Texas Turnpike System affirms that innovative
financing can make the Trans Texas Corridor a reality."
Click here to view map
Unlike pay-as-you-go projects that
are constructed in a piecemeal approach, construction of several
segments of the central turnpike will occur simultaneously
to save time and money. The states financial model consists
of four elements: $2.2 billion in tax-free revenue bonds;
$700 million from TxDOT; $500 million from affected communities
and a $916-million federal loan under the Transportation Infrastructure
Finance and Innovation Act. The state at its leisure can draw
on the TIFIA loan, which has a locked-in 5.41% interest rate,
to pay off short-term obligation notes. Since those notes
are backed with federal funds, they have an interest rate
2% lower than the TIFIA loan. As a result, the state hopes
to save up to $70 million in interest.
TOLLED
Texas turnpike may pave way for more ambitious system.
The turnpike will levy a usage
fee of 11.5 to 15 a mile, depending on the route, to retire
its debt. If the project finishes in Dec. 2007, as scheduled,
it could become the first piece of the Trans Texas Corridor.
The projects fate, however, lies in SH 130its
largest and most complex component. The $1.5-billion, 49-mile,
four-lane divided concrete toll road will stretch from Georgetown,
north of Austin, to Seguin, east of San Antonio. In June 2002,
Austin based Lone Star Infrastruture LLC, a joint venture
of Fluor Corp., Aliso Viejo, Calif., Atlanta-based Balfour
Beatty Inc., and T.J. Lambrecht Construction Inc., Joliet,
Ill., won the $1.36-billion design-build-maintain fixed-price
contract, beating out a cheaper asphalt highway proposal from
Four Rivers Developers, a consortium led by Watsonville, Calif.-based
Granite Construction Inc. Four Rivers base price was
$50 million lower, but its 15-year maintenance cost $159 million.
TxDOT, in its evaluation, added $26 million in asphalt milling
and overlay expenses to that proposal for maintenance years
16 through 30. Lone Star only had a $64.5-million maintenance
budget, which secured it the contract despite 269 more days
of construction time.
The SH 130 contract entails construction
and 15 years maintenance, with four toll plazas, 29
exit ramps and 119 bridges, the longest being 220 ft. Right-of-way
acquisitions and utility relocation are included in the contract.
The five-year construction program calls for five interchanges,
30-million cu yd of earthwork, 1.7-million tons of asphalt
paving, 2.7-million tons of concrete paving, 350,000 sq ft
of steel bridges and 5 million sq ft of concrete bridges.
There are 200 designers, 90 subcontractors
and a work force of 1,100 people on the job to open SH 130
by December 2007. Four milestone completion dates each carry
incentives from $7,500 to $10,000 a day up to $2 million,
as well as daily penalties ranging from $35,000 to $50,000.
The project stipulations cap LSIs liquidated damages
at $100 million.
"The ability to handle the
project from start to finish appealed to us," says Douglas
Fuller, LSI project director. "There is a certain efficiency
in a design-build-maintain package that mitigates risks from
our standpoint and keeps costs under control."
Other turnpike contracts are conventional
low-bid, but with big risks and incentives. The 13-mile SH
45 North project consists of a six-lane divided concrete toll
road extending from west of U.S. 183 eastward to SH 130 with
four major interchanges. One of those, at SH 130, was so important
to the City of Round Rock that it contributed $31 million
from voter-approved tax hikes. "Technically we didnt
have to put in anything, but we really want it built,"
says Tom Martin, Round Rocks transportation services
director. With its own population doubling in a decade to
77,000, the city plans $80 million worth of local road work
to support the turnpike.
MARCHING
ON Central Texas Turnpike work is on track to be
completed by 2007, almost 25 years faster than by traditional
project delivery.
Most of SH 45 North is under way,
with the final two contracts scheduled to be put out to bid
this month and in March. Last January, a joint venture of
Zachry Construction Corp., San Antonio, and Gilbert Texas
Construction LP, a unit of Peter Kiewit Sons Inc., Omaha,
Neb., landed the $81-million, SH 45 North-Loop I interchange.
The work calls for 2.7 miles of six-lane concrete roadway
with 13 concrete bridges and four flyovers, the largest 76
ft tall and 1.25 miles long. Scheduled to open by March 2006,
the job carries $32,000 a day in penalties after 995 working
days.
Other contracts include:
A $107-million, 3.5-mile Loop 1 extension from Parmer
Lane to SH 45 North, won in June by Zachry-Gilbert. The
six-lane concrete road, toll plaza and 1.5 miles of frontage
roads is slated for a Sept. 2007 opening. The team can collect
a one-time $2-million bonus if things wrap up by July 14,
2006. There are up to $31,900 a day in liquidated damages.
A $103-million, two-mile section of SH 45 North, won by
Archer-Western Contractors Ltd., Chicago, in May. Work entails
building a six-lane, five-level interchange at I-35 and
extending frontage roads two miles to CR 170. There is an
early completion bonus of $1.5 million if the project is
finished by May 2006, and $32,000 a day in late penalties
after December 2006.
A $63.2-million, 2.5-mile new east-west thoroughfare between
Travis and Williamson counties, part of SH 45 North. Granite
Construction Inc. and J.D. Abrams LP, Austin, won the job
in August and must finish the six-lane concrete divided
toll road by December 2006 or incur $30,000 a day in fines.
A $101.5-million, 2.8-mile section of SH 45 North, won
in September by Dallas-based Austin Bridge and Road LP.
The contract includes the U.S. 183/SH 45 North interchange
and a six-lane divided concrete toll highway plus eight
bridges, a toll plaza, retaining walls and a drainage system.
Scheduled to finish in December 2006, the contractor can
collect a $4-million bonus for early completion, or face
$32,000-a-day late fines.
Recent TxDOT reports say the multi-contract
project is ahead of schedule and roughly $200 million under
its original budget. Says Michael Behrens, TxDOT executive
director: "All indications are that the Central Texas
Turnpike project is on track to meet its scheduled opening."
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