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Adopting
a new contracting strategy for the main partof the Woodrow
Wilson bridge Maryland's State Highway Administration will
advertise three contracts for the bridge superstructure. The
first, covering the bascule portions of the twin, six-lane
spans, is to appear July 2. In announcing the plan on June
20, State Highway Administrator Parker F. Williams said the
state's engineering estimate for the bascule contract ranges
from $140 million to $170 million. Bid opening is set for
Nov. 7.
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| (Photo by Potomace
Crossing Consultants) |
The state originally planned one
contract for the superstructure of the Potomac River crossing,
but it was forced to shift gears in December when the lone
bid it received totaled nearly $860 million, or more than
70% above the upper end of its $450 million to $500 million
engineering estimate range.
In January, SHA rejected the lone
bid, from a team of Kiewit Construction Co., Tidewater Construction
Corp., and Clark Construction Group Inc.
Williams says he hopes that the
contract repackaging will draw more bidders and keep prices
down. But he concedes that the change in plans has cost the
project about 11 months.
The other two contracts will be
advertised in October, with bid openings in mid-February.
One contract will be for the over-water Maryland approaches
of the twin span; the other will cover the over-land approaches
from the Virginia side. Williams declined to give estimates
for those contracts.
Williams said, "We think
that with all of the efforts that we have undertaken so far...we're
going to be able to bring this project in within sight of
the original estimates that we had on the project." The
Federal Highway Administration was comfortable enough with
Maryland's revised strategy that it gave a green light to
the plan for the first contract.
The superstructure is the largest
element of the $2.4-billion project, which also includes upgrades
to four major interchanges, two each in Maryland and Virginia,
leading up to the bridge.
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