A team of American
Bridge Co., Pittsburgh, and Edward Kraemer & Sons Inc.,
Plain, Wis., was apparent low bidder on the last of three
contracts for the new Woodrow Wilson bridge across the Potomac
River near Washington, D.C. All four proposals received by
the Maryland State Highway Administration at the May 1 bid
opening came in well below the agency's $255-million estimate.
The American Bridge-Kraemer venture's
bid of $191.2 million was 25% below the
state estimate. Second-lowest was Fru-Con Construction Corp.,
Ballwin, Mo.,
at $197.5 million. They were followed by Tidewater Skanska
Inc., Virginia Beach-Traylor Bros. Inc., Evansville, Ind.
at $203.1 million, and a team led by Cianbro Corp.,
Pittsfield, Maine, at $213.3 million.
American Bridge and Kraemer also
won the first of the Wilson bridge contracts, awarded on Jan.
31, for the bascule portion of each of the two planned six-lane
parallel bridges.
The state split the bridge superstructure
into three separate contracts after its initial, single-contract
approach drew just one bid in later 2001, which came in at
$860 million, or more than 70% above its estimate.
If the American Bridge-Kraemer
bid holds, the three contracts' total value would be $491
million, only $4 million above the agency's 2001 estimate
and about $360 million below the single 2001 bid.
The bridge superstructure is the
central element in a $2.56-billion project, which also includes
major upgrades to four large Capital Beltway interchanges
leading up to the crossing. Project officials increased the
project cost last year in an updated financial plan. But Robert
Douglass, SHA's director for the bridge project says, "We're
back on our original budget."
The latest contract is the largest
of the three, covering the 3,300-foot stretch from the Maryland
abutment across more than three-quarters of the Potomac's
width, to the bascule section, Officials are aiming to open
the outer bridge in late 2005 or early 2006 and the inner
bridge two years later.