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Intensifying urbanization
in developing countries and worsening congestion in developed
ones are driving demand for extensions and upgrades to metro
systems. Financing remains a key constraint to new construction,
but this is spurring innovative program management techniques.
The metro market "is not huge,"
says Ed Pleuva, a director of U.K.-based design firm FaberMaunsell
Ltd. But growing demand is reflected by a 3% annual rise in
train car sales, says Dominique Pouliquen, senior vice president
of product and strategy at Paris-based Alstom Transport S.A.
Alstom has 12 projects under construction
globally. About half consist of new or extended lines, says
Pouliquen. The majority are located in Asia and Western Europe.
North America accounts for some 20% of projects.
"Growth in Asia is mainly
triggered by new lines, while in Europe its mainly replacement
of big fleets," says Pouliquen. Shanghai, for example,
is building 181 kilometers of metro between 2000 and 2005.
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Growth.
Although global subway projects are increasing as old
systems age and developing countries grow, the market
is slow to advance.
(Photos courtesy of Parsons Brinkerhoff) |
Typically, turnkey procurement
accounts for about half the new metro work, with owners managing
the rest, adds Pouliquen. Almost invariably, metro funding
comes from public budgets, says David Powell, director for
international metro business at London-based consultant Mott
MacDonald Group. But his firm is among those preparing to
bid for one exceptiona project in Milan, Italy, to be
20% contractor-funded.
Private financing for a proposed
metro in Thessaloniki, Greece, failed, says Pouliquen. A consortium
led by Bouygues Group, Paris, won the bid, but the contract
floundered after long negotiations. Now its on the market
again as a turnkey project, he notes.
In contrast, a complicated private
financing deal is taking shape for London Underground Ltd.,
the worlds first metro system. Keeping train operations
under public control, the government divided train and infrastructure
maintenance and enhancement into three privately financed
30-year contracts.
To prepare, LUL divided infrastructure
and train maintenance crews into three shadow infrastructure
companies, or "infracos." Each took charge of one-third
of the network and acted as a company, earning fees, penalties
and bonuses, says Geoff Virrels, who ran one infraco with
a 2,000-member staff.
A consortium including Bechtel
Corp., San Francisco, signed the first contract in 2002. The
following April, Metronet signed contracts for the remaining
two sections. Metronet is owned by WS Atkins plc, Epsom and
London-based companies Balfour Beatty Construction Ltd. and
RWE Thames Water Ltd.
Committed investment by the three
companies in the first 7.5 years will reach $17.5 billion,
rising to nearly $30 billion over 30 years. During the first
year, LUL paid the three contractors nearly $2 billion in
fees. The contracts are so complicated that bidding costs
exceeded $800 million, says the National Audit Office.
"This is the mother of all
complex infrastructure projects," says Peter Zuk, new
chief program officer at LUL. In the first two years of the
contracts "some modest accomplishments have occurred,
but we are just beginning," says Zuk.
"The early days were a very,
very steep learning curve," says Metronet Executive Chairman
John Weight. "We got 3,000 people transferred [from LUL]."
Metronets work force has increased and presently employs
about 5,000 people.
The contracts feature the use of
output specifications. Rather than telling the contractors
what work is needed, LUL sets targets such as train punctuality,
says Virrels, who now heads a LUL team on one of Metronets
two sections. Only station enhancements are conventionally
"input specified."
To define work, contractors provide
a detailed plan for the next year and in less detail for the
next 7.5 years. Regular meetings monitor progress and LUL
moni-tors site work. "I dont mind as long as
it doesnt interfere,"
says Stephen Hall, Metronets strategic program director.
Though technical due diligence established the systems
condition, the contractors still must inspect 15,000 "grey
assets" such as bridges, says Hall.
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| Digging
Deep. Publicly funded heavy rail project in Delhi,
India, includes cut-and-cover, NATM and hard rock tunneling
methods. |
The estimated $2.3-billion system
taking shape in Delhi, India, is one of the worlds largest
major publicly funded heavy rail projects. Delhi Metro Rail
Corp. Ltd. commissioned the initial 8-km-line two years ago,
and another 14.1 km has opened since. A five-firm general
consultant team including Parsons Brinckerhoff, New York City,
aids the owner.
The 25-km third line is to start
operation late next year. The 10.6 km of tunnels running north-south
through the central business district is divided into two
turnkey civil contracts. A consortium including Skanska A.B.,
Stockholm, won the $220-million cut-and-cover job for the
northern 4.1 km in 2001 and is to be finished in December.
Munich-based Dywidag International
GmbH leads a consortium on the $400-million southern contract,
which started in April 2001. The southern 6.5 km is mostly
bored with five cut-and-cover stations, says Derek Winsor,
project director for design firm Mott MacDonald. One station
and a short section used the New Austrian Tunneling Method.
The team used two earth pressure
balance machines for clay sections plus a hard rock tunneler.
Train service is due to start next June in one station as
a showcase. Other stations are not due for full completion
until March 2006.
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