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| UNIQUE
Bridge will be first single-tower self-anchored suspension
span. (Photo courteys of NewBayBridge.org/Caltrans) |
In an effort to cut
costs and boost competition on its $2.6-billion San Francisco-Oakland
Bay Bridge project, the California Dept. of Transportation
is changing bid requirements and scheduling. In a controversial
move, the agency also is allowing potential bidders to use
foreign steel.
Last month, a joint venture of
Kiewit Pacific, FCI Constructors Inc. and Manson Construction
Co. submitted a $210-million foundation bid that came in 63%,
or about $85 million, over estimate, says Dan McElhinney,
chief of the toll bridge construction program for Caltrans.
Caltrans will rebid the contract for the 530-ft-tall tower
foundation and support structures that tie the suspension
bridge deck into the Skyway approach span. Kiewit Pacific
officials could not be reached for comment by press time.
In response to contractor input
and the high price of the rejected sole bid, Caltrans has
made key changes. One extends the construction schedule for
the suspension span by 15 months, says McElhinney. Caltrans
rescheduled the bid date for the bridges second-largest
contract, the $740-million suspension spans superstructure,
from Oct. 21 to Jan. 21.
Prospective bidders will now bid
on time as well as labor and materials under the A plus B
formula. The agency hopes the delay and changes will invite
more competition. "Were expecting a good number
of bidders in January," says McElhinney. Three or four
joint ventures might bid on the span, he says.
Over the objections of U.S. steel
producers, Caltrans will allow contractors to include foreign-produced
steel in bids for the span. Contractors had expressed concern
about whether the U.S. domestic market could supply the required
67,000 tons of steel, McElhinney says.
Nancy Gravatt, a spokesperson for
the American Iron and Steel Institute, Washington, D.C., contends
that steel prices in the U.S. are often lower than in overseas
markets. Con Abnee, executive director of Chicago-based National
Steel Bridge Alliance, adds that "steel bridge fabrication
facilities and steel mill facilities are very interested...in
working with the decision-makers to make sure that this is
a domestic bridge."
But fabricators are concerned "that
we dont have facilities large enough at this time to
fabricate bridge deck sections that they want to go with,"
Abnee adds. The design of the suspension superstructure calls
for parallel 25-m-wide hollow orthotropic steel boxes, 17
m apart, each accommodating five lanes of traffic.
McElhinney contends that bidding
requirements offer advantages to domestic suppliers. Federal
Buy American requirements mandate the inclusion of domestic
structural steel in the bids. Domestic steel bids will get
a 25% advantage, he says.
Procurement changes affect the
bridges signature componentits innovative 1,860-ft-long
suspension span. Designed by T.Y. Lin International, San Francisco,
in joint venture with Moffatt & Nichol, Long Beach, Calif.,
the asymmetrical section will be the first-ever single-tower,
self-anchored suspension span. The single cable will wrap
over the tower, underneath the western end of the span, over
the tower again, and anchor in the roadway deck at the eastern
end, says Herb Rothman, principal in charge for Weidlinger
Associates Inc., New York City, T.Y. Lins subcontractor
for the span.
Nine of 16 contracts are in construction,
three are advertised, and four are in design, says McElhinney.
Work is about 30% complete on the bridges single largest
section, the $1.1-billion Skyway east span. The 1.5-mile-long
concrete segmental bridge is Caltrans largest-ever contract.
A joint venture of Kiewit Pacific, FCI and Manson is on track
to complete the Skyway by late 2006 or early 2007, says McElhinney.
The entire project is scheduled for completion in 2010.
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