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Many
people in many ways serve the best interests of the
construction industry. The editors of ENR have chosen
the following individuals for achievements covered in
the magazine in 2003. One of them is selected annually
to win ENR's highest honor, the Award of Excellence.
The U.S. Army's Col. Gregg F. Martin now joins this
impressive group. Congratulations to construction's
best. Click
here to read the
cover story from April 5th issue about the Award of
Excellence Winner.

The 2.1-mile-long, $2.6-billion replacement of the San
Francisco-Oakland Bay Bridge east span includes a global
firsta 530-ft-high, single-pylon, self-anchored
suspension bridge. Known worldwide as the grandmaster
of bridge design, T.Y. Lin Internationals Man-Chung
Tang led the team that
designed the elegant crossing as a lifeline that will
reopen within 24 hours of a major quake.
As former manager of design and construction support
for supplementary cable strengthening on
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| Maine
bridge was fixed with stronger cables. (Photo courtesy
of Cianbro) |
Lisbons
Tagus River Bridge, arsons Transportation Groups
Jamey A. Barbas was
uniquely qualified to lead the emergency supplemental
cable installation on the 72-year-old, 1,500-ft-long Waldo-Hancock
Bridge in Maine. State officials wanted a quick and cost-effective
fix after discovering extensive degradation on one main cable,
which forced load limitations and a fast-track replacement.
Barbas work restored the bridge to original load-carrying
capacity and proved cable strengthening is an economical alternative
to replacement.
Keeping a 100-year-old, 660-mile subway network well-maintained
and working at capacity is a daunting challenge, but Mysore
Nagaraja has exceeded expectations in New York City.
As former senior vice president and chief engineer of the
Metropolitan Transportation Authoritys New York City
Transit unit, he supervised more than $4 billion in line,
facility and station renovations. These include the fast-track
restoration of the subway line in lower Manhattan that was
heavily damaged on Sept. 11, 2001. Nagaraja has set a new
tone for MTA construction, slicing through bureaucracy and
keeping bid prices realistic and competitive. He now is president
of MTAs newly formed Capital Construction Co.
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| Other
U.S. cities are looking at Seattles template that
produced an architectural icon while reinventing libraries.
(Photo courtesy of Michael Dickter Magnusson Klemencic
Associates) |

Seattle City Librarian Deborah L. Jacobs
shatters stereotypes about librarians the way the 412,000-sq-ft
Seattle Central Library shatters stereotypes about libraries.
In the gravity-defying flagship of the citys $235-million
Libraries for All capital program, Jacobs and her team have
harnessed innovative architecture, engineering and construction
to reinvent and reinvigorate the venerated institution. Jacobs
engaged citizens and inspired designers to devise a new programmatic
model that successfully commingles the "book" age
with the digital age. The crusade has produced a civic architectural
icon that provides an inspirational environment for people
to meet, think and borrow, free of charge.
As chief engineer to the general commanding the Fifth U.S.
Army Corps in Iraq, Col. Gregg Martin
was resource planner, scheduler and project manager for combat
engineers in last springs campaign. The fast-moving
assaults demand for hard-charging combat construction
resources redefined the role of the modern warrior-engineer.
As fighting ebbed, Martins troops rapidly became the
first to respond to the challenges of reconstruction and were
critical sustainers of the peacemaking effort. Martin led
his troops in setting an exemplary and courageous standard
for the accomplishment of a host of construction missions.

Its a very simple idea with very far-ranging implications
and the engineering director of the San Juan Unified School
District outside Sacramento is the first to carry it out.
San Juan has about 400 of what are believed to be California's
80,000 portable classroom units. Many are in bad shape with
air, lighting and acoustics below state standards. Engineering
director Don Haase decided the
district could create permanent classrooms cheaply by keeping
steel frames of many of the portable classrooms and fitting
them with new walls, roofs and interiors. Thousands of dollars
are saved with each unit and other districts have noticed.

Engineer Ahmad Rahimians
seismic design for Latin Americas tallest building proved,
several months before Torre Mayor officially opened, that
Mexico City could shake without the 225-meter-tall tower being
damaged. Frayed nerves are calmed by a novel configuration
of 24 dampers in a perimeter braced frame coupled with a perimeter
moment frame, and 72 dampers in the core. Placement of perimeter
dampers between bracing lines optimizes response to quake
forces and increases creature comfort, a concept so novel
that Cantor-Seinuks Rahimian patented the design. The
$4 million spent for dampers nearly paid for itself by reducing
steel tonnage and caisson depth, each by more than 20%. The
system allowed tighter mechanical tolerances and will minimize
quake damage to finishes.

Heralding a sea change in data collection,
Mark Klusza, co-founder and president of BitWyse Solutions
Inc., developed LASERGen software that quickly integrates
raw laser scan data into CAD-ready computer files. The system
analyzes and displays raw data within CAD files, eliminating
cumbersome manual tracing or remodeled laser scans while providing
clash protection. Laser scanning is poised to replace manual
measurements, photogrammetry and videogrammetry as a fast,
cost-effective means of collecting and utilizing data. LASERGen
provides a fast, low cost platform to help speed this change.
 The
first union of steel pipe megacolumns filled with concrete
and steel-plate shear walls, which form the core of Seattles
118-meter-tall federal courthouse, offers the pluses of pure
concrete shear wall cores without penalties of mass and weight.
The hybrid system, developed by structural engineer Kurt
A. Nordquist before he retired from Magnusson Klemencic
Associates, protects the courthouse with superior earthquake
resistance. It also frees exterior walls of heavy structure,
allowing for transparent architecture while gobbling up less
real estate than would a concrete core. Under seismic loads,
megacolumns that provide boundary elements for the core walls
remain pristine while the walls are allowed to deform.

The U.S. Green Building Councils Leadership in Energy
and Environmental Design rating system has become the standard
tool for evaluating environmental impact of commercial and
institutional construction. As chair of the councils
LEED steering committee, Rob Watson,
a senior scientist at the Natural Resources Defense Council,
helped create the systems framework and was instrumental
in obtaining key startup funding. Since launch of the performance-based
metric in 2000, owners and building teams for more than 1,000
projects, or about 5% of U.S. commercial construction, have
taken the first step toward achieving a LEED rating. Several
federal agencies have adopted LEED and many municipal governments
mandate a minimum LEED rating as a prerequisite for public
funding. Watson is championing adoption of LEED in China where
it is already being used for design and construction of several
projects.

Not only will Taipei 101, the 508-meter-tall tower in Taiwans
capital, acquire the record of worlds tallest when it
opens this year, it also boasts the worlds largest tuned
mass damper. The 660-tonne spherical TMD, designed by a team
led by Motioneering Inc.s Brian
Breukelman, will be visible from upper level public
areas as part of the buildings architecture. The element
joins a trend to use damping to counter increasing vibrations
caused by ever-taller towers that are less stiff.

In a move intended to raise quality, the Council of American
Structural Engineers has published A Guideline Addressing
Coordination and Completeness of Structural Construction Documents.
Degenkolb Engineers Thomas D.
Wosser led the two-year effort that produced the 35-page
"coping mechanism" intended to help structural engineers
get away from the extremes of being the beat-up kid or the
belligerent bully. The primer defines and discusses nearly
everything an engineer needs to know on the business of a
project, including design team responsibilities, delivery
systems and quality management. CASE produced the guide even
though, as a de facto standard of care, lawyers for contractors
might use it against engineers on claims.
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Restoring PATH commuter service between
New York City and New Jersey was a four-year job that
took just 21 months. (Photo courtesy of Port Authority
of New York and New Jersey)
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Tom Groark, assistant chief engineer of the Port Authority
of New York and New Jersey, ably managed a team of agency
professionals and outside contractors that restored complete
service to the Port Authority Trans-Hudson rail system, damaged
on Sept. 11, 2001, in just 21 months. The $566-million project
included reconstruction of damaged and flooded tunnels, stations
and related infrastructure. It was complicated by federal
funding oversight and scheduling unknowns dictated by Ground
Zero cleanup.

Architect James Timberlake convinced
skeptical maintenance and facilities officials at the University
of Pennsylvania to use a unitized, pressurized, double-skin
curtain wall to clad the $15.5-million building that KieranTimberlake
Associates was designing for the School of Engineering and
Applied Science. Although the system was untried in the U.S.,
Timberlake persuaded the owner on the systems merits
even after the general contractor offered to close an 8% budget
gap by substituting a conventional stick-built, single-skin
system. Return room air circulates in a 4-in. cavity between
the walls outer and inner face, permitting downsizing
of the mechanical system. The curtain wall also uses a highly
transparent glass to maximize penetration of natural light
into the 48,000-sq-ft, six-story building, and still comply
with a tough city energy code.
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Afghan road project may be worlds
most dangerous. (Photo courtesy of the Berger Group)
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Construction professionals are serving literally on the front
lines of the war on terror and Fred
Chace, Louis Berger Group superintendent on the Kabul-to-Kandahar
highway project in Afghanistan, exemplifies the spirit of
these dedicated people. In an Oct. 13 ambush on a remote stretch
of road, a bullet creased the top of his head, causing severe
bleeding. He was evacuated and treated in Kandahar, but returned
to work five days later. He declined a job as contracts manager
in Kabul, saying he felt he could contribute most by working
in the field.

Thornton-Tomasetti structural engineer Joseph
G. Burns dragged the team building Chicagos 61,500-seat
Soldier Field into the digital age of steel design and detailing.
The move sounded a faint but audible death knell for the traditional
paper drawing as a contract deliverable. Burns knew that creating
an accurate three-dimensional, digital model and sharing it
with the steel fabricator was the best way to ensure an accurate
field fit-up of the 13,000-ton primary frame, critical for
timely completion. The process, still in its shake-out phase,
eliminates the fabricators redrawing of design documents
and the errors that can follow. It also speeds approvals.

Seeking the best solutions for the Bonneville Power Administrationss
600-mile transmission grid expansion program, network planning
manager Brian Silverstein threw
open the doors to give a full array of stakeholders a voice
in evaluating possible ways to meet the need. He established
the Roundtable on Nonconstruction Alternatives, with 18 members
representing a wide spectrum of the public. The federal utilitys
openness to public scrutiny generated a trust that eliminated
objections to current projects and turned attention to evaluating
proposed ones.

For homeland security, engineers responsible for public water
supply quality assurance needed quicker test results than
the standard 24 to 96-hour turnaround. Kenneth
Hayes, president of Aqua Survey Inc., developed a one-hour
test kit for water contamination that uses daphnia, or water
fleas, to detect a wide range of toxins that could be available
to terrorists. Battelle Memorial Institute and the U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency confirmed that Aqua Survey kits detected
all toxins in product tests.
When a general contractor in Westlake, La., was looking for
a faster and safer way to lay reinforced concrete pipe, its
solution was the "Pipe Caddy," a unique lifting
attachment for hydraulic excavators that eliminates dangerous
rigging. Gavin Abshire, Pipe
Caddy co-inventor and president of River West Enterprises,
claims it enables operators to pick, carry and place twice
as much pipe per shift without leaving the cab. Contractors
using the attachment say they have "made a fortune"
by cutting installation time while enhancing jobsite safety.
In
1997, the Minnesota Dept. of Transportation demanded that
contractors find a unified way to train construction-truck
drivers or it would do it for them. Larry
Ouellette of St. Cloud State University has brought
together public and private partners for the states
new training program. As its chief administrator and instructor,
Ouellette has helped contractors, state transportation officials
and state police tackle work-zone safety with quantifiable
results in reduced accidents and insurance premiums. In 2004,
contractors will send about 2,000 operators to the program,
the most in its five-year history.
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| Boston's
CA/T project opened a critical link in 2003. (Photo courtesy
of Matt Poirier / Bigdig.com) |

Using a challenging variety of engineering techniques Michael
T. Bertoulin, the Central Artery/Tunnel Projects
Interstate 90 milestone manager and Parsons Brinckerhoff Quade
& Douglas vice president, overcame chronic schedule problems
to open the critical section of the $6.5-billion I-90 tunnel
connecting the Massachusetts Turnpike with Logan International
Airport. Bertoulin oversaw construction of a vast array of
jacked, immersed and cut-and-cover tunnels through the largest
soil mixing operation in North America. He modified plans
and simultaneously ran dredging, drilled shaft, casting basin
and cut-and-cover changes that compressed two years worth
of work into one.

From past experience, Tarik Ayyad
knows what can happen when builders are not kept abreast of
design changes. To find a solution, he developed ShareChive,
a service that shares project data hosted on the companys
server, with ruggedized tablet PCs that are leased to clients.
Tablets are fully loaded with massive amounts of project data
and synchronize changes automatically with the main database
opportunistically, meaning whenever they enter an area of
cell phone service. Similarly, all records made on tablets
are stored and shared just as often, ensuring that if one
is lost or destroyed, its data has already been captured by
the central database and every other tablet PC on the job.

Designers, contractors and owners can now work together to
minimize mold problems in buildings by using a manual that
elevates the level of knowledge. Rick
Poppe, strategic growth officer at The Weitz Co., led
the Associated General Contractors task force that wrote
the manual. The group was committed to producing the document
despite concern that it may be used as a standard of care
in litigation. The important issue, members believed, is that
the manual provides the whole construction team with an action-oriented
tool to help prevent mold problems in the first place

Overwhelmed by the unprecedented amount of work after voters
approved $1.5 billion in funding, San Diegos school
construction program got off to a slow start, completing less
work for more money than was budgeted. Lou
Smith, a retired Navy construction executive, was able
to use the same staff plus new hires and consultants and turn
the program around. Under his leadership, San Diego city schools
have completed millions of dollars of classroom and school
renovations that meet the districts educational goals.
Smith brought modern management techniques to a mid-size citys
school building plan.

The war in Iraq was still being fought when Bechtel National
Inc. was chosen by the U.S. Agency for International Development
to head the initial $680-million rebuilding program. Under
intense political scrutiny and the need to start the project
quickly, Bechtel turned to Cliff Mumm,
a veteran program manager with extensive civil infrastructure
experience. Under a short deadline to restore power and water
and ready the port of Umm Qasr to receive food and supplies,
Mumm put together a team of Bechtel leaders, Iraqi subcontractors
and an international work force. The port was opened in October
and the fast-track program is on schedule despite unrest.
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