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April 27, 2005
Hop on the Bus, Gus. Make a New Plan, Stan
Designers and architects
looking for future contracts with the Metropolitan Transportation
Administrations New York City Transit Authority should
pay more attention to bus depots. Cosema Crawford, chief engineer
for the NYCTA, said at a mid-April transportation breakfast
forum that we receive 40 to 50 design proposals for every
station redesign; we get three or four for a bus depot.
The subway station rehabilitation program is restrained by a
limited capital budget. The subway core maintenance budget will
get about $15 billion over the next five years; Crawford says
the needs equal $17 billion. Consultants and contractors should
look at work relating to hidden infrastructuresome
$3.3 billion in fan plants, substations and maintenance facilities.
While most construction management and about 60 percent of design
tends to be in-house, Crawford notes that the agency is looking
for consultants to help achieve a formal commissioning
approach, with the goal of maintaining a system for a life cycle.
The agency will also be spending
some security-related money$500 million for the next
capital program plus the remainder of $500 million in the
last and will seek consultants on various security-related
jobs, Crawford said.
Another panelist, Douglas Curry,
regional director for the New York State Dept. of Transportation,
emphasized the importance of a $2.9-billion bond issue to
be voted on this November. The money would divid funds between
the state DOT and the MTA. He noted that the NYSDOT is reorganizing
internally, creating different departments for design and
construction, operations and planning and policy. Creating
key freight centers throughout the state will be key, he said.
As for design-build legislation, were optimistic
it will come, he said. Were ready
to go with design-build.
Donald Framm, the chief architect
for the Port Authority of New York & New Jersey, says
the agency is planning, among other projects, a 1,900-space
new parking garage at John F. Kennedy Airport and expansion
of LaGuardias terminals to handle 30 million passengers
by 2020. Just as the NYSDOT envisions key spots for moving
freight throughout the state, so the port authority envisioned
more transit-based growth centers to handle an anticipated
2.4 million new New York City residents by 2025. The redevelopment
of Jamaica, Queens around the Airtrain terminal there is one
example.
Another port authority project,
still in the environmental and planning stages, involves the
Goethals Bridge replacement. The agency will say little officially,
but the bridge design team working on steel and cable-stayed
options is a formidable one: Its led by Figg Engineering
Group, Tallahassee, and HNTB, Kansas City.
On a recent visit to Los Angeles,
I attended a Womens Transportation Seminar meeting that
featured new Caltrans engineer Richard Land. Afterwards, I
got to visit the new Caltrans district headquartersan
architectural icon of a building that features solar panels,
a central glass-walled empty box that allows views of the
floors on every side, and a surreal conference room with opaque
colored blocks of glowing light. (One random observation from
a 10-year New Yorkertheyre not afraid of having
a 13th floor button in the elevator).
In one way it reminded me of the
Taj Majal that the Connecticut Dept. of Transportation
built for itself back in the early 90s amidst the bleak nothingless
of Hartford. One might debate the issue of splendid buildings
being built for agencies struggling with capital budgets.
But the Caltrans building demonstrated a marvelous efficiency
in use of light, space and layout. And its part of downtown
Los Angeles evolving renaissance from a bleak after-5
p.m. ghost town into something resembling a true downtown
core.
The point, here, is not so
much the building but the truly 21st-century American generation
of engineers, planners and managers inhabiting it. Los Angeles
Dept. of Transportation District 7 assistant general manager
James Okazaki took me under his wing and through the building
(all the while reminding Caltrans folks that LADOT could make
great use of some of those spare floors), stopping constantly
to do quick business with his colleagues. Ozakazi is in charge
of a bus rapid transit project expansion from the citys
original 2 lines and 38 miles to 28 lines and 450 miles, an
approximately $80-million endeavor. Black, Latino, Asian,
Middle Eastern and women engineers in high-level positions
were everywhere. It was like being at a Minorities in Construction/Women
In Construction meeting, but the beauty of it was that this
was just another day at the engineering office.
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Takeoffs
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Aileen Cho, Editor
Aileen is ENR's senior transportation editor.
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