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Risk. Alaska Way viaduct was damaged in 2001 earthquake.
(Photo courtesy of Washington State DOT) |
The city of Seattle
and the Washington Dept. of Transportation are moving on plans
to replace the 51-year-old Alaska Way Viaduct with a 5,300-ft-long
tunnel estimated to cost up to $4 billion.
Parsons Brinckerhoff, New York
City, is beginning environmental impact studies for the six-lane
tunnel that would replace the double-deck concrete artery
carrying 110,000 cars per day, plus the citys sea wall.
Both were critically damaged in 2001 when a 6.8 earthquake
hit the Puget Sound region, forcing WDOT to temporarily shut
down the roadway (ENR 4/9/01 p. 16). "Were answering
the wake-up call of the Nisqually earthquake," says Richard
Conlin, chairman of the City Councils transportation
committee.
For two years, WSDOT held more
than 80 community briefings and nine public hearings, gathering
feedback on six different proposals for repairing the viaduct.
In September, the city and WSDOT eliminated proposals to build
a new bridge, construct a bypass tunnel, widen the Alaska
Way arterial or simply demolish the viaduct. That left two
options: construct a tunnel or rebuild the viaduct. Now, rebuilding
is only being considered as a contingency plan in case the
agencies fall short of raising the estimated $3.4 billion
to $4 billion for the tunnel. Click
here to view graphics
Rebuilding the viaduct would cost
$1.3 billion less than constructing the tunnel and would be
completed a year quicker, WSDOT officials say. But the city
council and local communities are throwing their weight behind
the tunnel option as a way to beautify the city and boost
its economy.
Since the earthquake, WSDOT has
implemented an extensive monitoring system on the viaduct,
restricted lane-use for larger vehicles and lowered the speed
limit. If any portion of the viaduct shows signs of additional
stress, the agency will take additional precautions including
further limits on vehicle speeds or closures, says David Dye,
WSDOT urban planner.
Preliminary designs revealed at
the Dec. 6 press conference announcing the plan show that
the tunnel roof would be depressed about 10 to 15 ft below
street level and its floor 31 ft below that. The walls would
extend nearly 15 ft below the bottom of the tunnel. Dye says
cut-and-cover tunneling with secant piles or cylinder piles
is likely.
The final environmental study is
expected to be completed by the end of 2006. Depending on
available funding, construction will begin in 2009 with a
projected completion date of 2016. As a joint project between
the city, WSDOT and the Federal Highway Administration, the
viaduct and seawall project would be paid for by a combination
of state, local and federal dollars.
The planned scope of the project
is comparable to that of Bostons Central Artery/Tunnel
project. Dye says agency planners studied CA/T and similar
projects to capitalize on lessons learned. He says that although
the agencies are working to present accurate cost estimates
and completion dates, there are still unknown conditions,
such as potential hazardous materials below ground, that could
affect these figures.
The city also announced it will seek $1 billion in FHWA funds
plus $100 million from the Army Corps of Engineers for a 1,700-ft
stretch of stand-alone seawall that is not part of the tunnel.
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