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...save the state at least $500 million,
it also will entail new environmental reviews that could take
18 months, with another six months to bid and award a contract.
Officials also will have to consider
whether, and how, a new span design will fit with the bridges
existing $294-million foundations that are more than 50% complete
and how to reduce the cost of the single-tower design. In
addition, says McPeak, "we need to get seismic performance
analysis on cable-stayed bridge alternatives."
Predictably, the long-awaited decision
to reject the bid was a blow to the bidding team. "In
a case like this, its pretty painful," says Bob
Luffy, CEO of American Bridge. "Things like this happen
all the time, but this one was big." Sources say the
firm invested as much as 30,000 hours in its bid.
Luffy and other officials close
to the procurement say that Caltrans officials repeatedly
were questioned on the states construction estimate
and the availability of funding to cover escalating costs,
which include skyrocketing steel prices. "Some 750 inquiries
were generated on this," says Luffy. "We probably
generated two-thirds of them. We did not bid it fat."
Adds another official close to the procurement: "They
had to realize [the project] would be north of $1 billion
but they held onto the $780-million budget."
Also in question is the role of
Peter Kiewit Sons Inc. in the bidding process. Sources
speculate that the firm was set to bid last spring, but did
not do so. "We believed it was competing against us until
after our bid was submitted," says one official on the
American Bridge team. "This way, they can stand back
and look at our price first."
Local news reports also hint of
Kiewits use of lobbyists to possibly influence the decision
to rebid. A Kiewit spokesman confirms that "from time
to time, we do hire advisors to help us understand the local
political situation," but he declines to elaborate on
services rendered or past strategy. At a meeting with state
officials, Kiewit indicated it would be interested in bidding
the project, along with its joint-venture partner, Carteret,
N.J.-based Koch Skanska.
The next step awaits return of
the state legislature in January. Caltrans will determine
what changes might make the existing design more biddable,
such as changes in steel fabrication, the roadbed deck and
the relationship between weight and loading factor. But "the
advocacy for SAS has not been as strong as it was a few years
ago," Oakes says.
Answering industry criticism that
Caltrans failed to fully respond to industry warnings about
the complex design, McPeak says the legislature specified
an SAS bridge on the urging of Bay Area officials. Not until
the bid opening last May after a 16-month bid period "did
the budget get blown," she says. But McPeak admits that
"there was not a sufficient amount of input from the
industry." Adds one team participant: "The bridge
got caught up in California politics. This kind of brinkmanship
on big public projects is a dangerous precedent."
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