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United States, California - us/86

Sewer

The City of Oxnard has awarded to Affholder a USD33.3 million contract to build two trunk sewers to serve the city and surrounding Ventura county. Both will eventually connect to Oxnard's planned USD39 million waste water treatment plant. Construction is set to commence in May on the nearly 5 km-long 1.5 m-diameter Redwood trunk sewer. The 3.2 km 1.07 m-diameter Ventura trunk segment will connect to the Redwood trunk sewer. Geology made of sandy silt. Microtunnelling will be used. Expected daily progress is 15 to 25 m. Depth of 7.5 to 9 m below the surface. Kennedy/Jenks Consultants are the designers of the Redwood trunk and Ventura trunk segments. Visit www.insituform.com and www.kennedyjenks.com 21/04.



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United States, New York - us/85

Metro

Request for Qualification, deadline 27th April, 2006 for consultant construction management services (contract CM-1311) for the subway Line 7 extension to Hudson Yards in Brooklyn. This is a architecture/engineering consultant to oversee the construction projects as and when they are awarded. The issue of Request for Proposals is 15th May, 2006. The Receipt of Proposals is scheduled for 15th June, 2006 for award in July. The extension will travel from Time Square, its present terminal station, at 41st Street going west and then south down to 25th Street. The project also includes a station cavern at 34th Street and an open cut station at 10th Avenue/41st Street. The project will be a mix of drill-and-blast, cut-and-cover and TBM excavation. TBM requirements: 5.95 m internal diameter tunnel (plus construction tolerances), with precast segmental lining or cast-in-place lining. Full-face hard rock TBM with capability to negotiate short reaches of mixed face and possible soft ground conditions, including very strong and very/extremely abrasive rock (Manhattan schist and pegmatites). Option to utilize precast segmental lining systems, to be watertight undrained systems. New or refurbished gripper, shield or double-shield type TBMs equipped with provisions for drilling probe holes and grout holes, 5.2 cm or larger disc cutters and automated guidance system.Contact No. 7 Subway Extension - Hudson Yards Development, c/o MTA New York City Transit, Government & Community Relations, 130 Livingston Street Brooklyn, NY 11201 or Marsha Korotyk, Procurement Manager, tel. +1 646 2526236, fax +1 646 2526179, e-mail marsha.korotyk@nyct.com and Ronald Pezik, Procurement Senior Director, tel. +1 646 2526234, fax +1 646 2526179, e-mail ronald.pezik@nyct.com. Visit www.mta.info/capconstr/7ext/documents.htm for more details about the project and www.nyc.gov/html/dcp/html/hyards/eis.shtml 16/06.A joint venture of Hill International, LiRo Engineers, Lemley International and HDR has received a contract from the New York Metropolitan Transportation Authority (MTA) to provide construction management services during extension of the subway Line 7 in New York City. The joint venture will be responsible for providing construction management services during all tunnelling work and during construction of all facilities and infrastructure including track, rail systems and stations, as well as project controls services throughout the duration of the project, which is anticipated to be completed by November 2013. Visit www.hillintl.com, www.liro.com, www.lemleyinternational.com and www.hdrinc.comThe project will provide transit access to the West Side of Manhattan by extending the line westward from Times Square under West 41st Street and southward along Eleventh Avenue to the southerly terminus at West 25th Street. The planned extension provides 2.2 km of tunnel to accommodate a two-track railroad with two lay-up tracks for the storage of six trains (three on each side). The extension also provides for two new stations: an intermediate station at West 41st Street and Tenth Avenue (Tenth Avenue station) and a two-track terminal station on Eleventh Avenue at West 34th Street (34th Street station). 22/07.The New York Metropolitan Transportation Authority (MTA) has approved a team of Skanska Civil USA, Schiavone Construction Co. and J.F. Shea Construction for a USD1.14 billion contract to build the 2.4 km extension of the subway line 7 to Manhattan's west side. When the contract has been signed, USD400 million will be included in Skanska's order bookings for the fourth quarter. The joint venture is the unique bidder and the job will be awarded in mid-November. Skanska is part of a joint venture named S3 Tunnel Constructors in which Skanska USA Civil and J.F. Shea Construction hold 35% each and the Schiavone Construction Company holds 30%. The team has a 57-month construction schedule to bore a 6.5 m-diameter tunnel through mostly hard rock some 40 metres deep. Visit www.skanska.com, www.schiavoneconstruction.com, www.jfshea.com and www.mta.info/capconstr/7ext/index.htmlThe assignment concerns the extension of the subway line 7 between its current terminus at Times Square and West Side of Manhattan, adding a new station at 11th Avenue-34th Street near the Jacob K. Javits Convention Center. A second station at 10th Avenue-41st Street dropped from the plans, but could be restored if funding can be found. That second station is not included in the contract award. However, a USD450 million option to build a shell for the station was included as part of the contract by the MTA, and must be acted on by the city within nine months from the start of construction, if the city wants to have a station shell built as part of the initial contract.Earlier this year, Skanska was awarded the project to build the first stage of the 2nd Avenue subway line on the East Side of Manhattan. This project is also being carried out by S3 Tunnel Constructors. Skanska's share of this contract amounts to USD126 million. Click us/73. 46/07.



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United States, Georgia - us/84

Sewage

Obayashi and Atlanta-based minority contractor MassAna Construction is the lowest bidder among the five teams who made an offer to build the Clear Creek and North Avenue tunnels, that will drain areas north of downtown Atlanta, and a pumping station. The JV offered a $210.2 million bid, 22% lower than the two closest competing bids of USD267.9 million and USD270 million. Contract signing planned on 30th March, 2004 with Atlanta's Department of Watershed Management. Two 8.2 m-diameter tunnels, each about 6.4 km in length, will be bored using two hard rock TBMs. Mucking-out with conveyor belts. The North Avenue tunnel would run south to north, beginning west of the college and ending at the R.M. Clayton Water Reclamation Center in northwest Atlanta. The Clean Creek tunnel will run east to west. The tunnels would intersect near the college and flow north to the R.M. Clayton pumping station. Construction to begin late next year. More details in E-News Weekly 13/2004. Visit www.ci.atlanta.ga.us/government/watershed.aspx and www.obayashi.co.jp/english 13/04.Obayashi and MassAna Construction ordered two Herrenknecht hard rock TBMs to excavate Atlanta's west area CSO storage tunnels. The 800-ton 91 m-long TBMs are open-style main beam machines, equipped with a 8,235 mm-diameter cutting head. The total installed main drive power is 3,200 kW, the thrust force is approximately 18,000 kN and the expected average compressive strength is 175 MPa. Geology made of fine to medium grained gneiss. Continuous conveyor for mucking-out. Cast in situ concrete lining. Machines to arrive in June 2005 for expected tunnelling start in July/August 2005.Contract A includes the 6,405 m 7.32 m finished diameter Clear Creek tunnel excavated by TBM in deep rock, 244 m of drill/blast excavated 3.35 m-diameter tunnel, one 4 m-diameter flow intake shaft structure and two 12.2 m-diameter shafts. Contract B includes the North Avenue tunnel and pumping station, consisting of a 7,140 m 7.32 m finished diameter deep rock tunnel, two 12.2 m-diameter shafts, a submersible type pumping station and one 7.32 m-diameter emergency overflow shaft and channel. Subscribe to E-News Weekly 13/2004. Visit www.herrenknecht.com 30/04.



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United States, Massachusetts - us/83

Public Transportation

URS Corporation, in JV with DMJM+Harris, was selected to design Phase III of the Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority (MBTA) Silver Line in Boston. Phase III consists of bus rapid transit (BRT) tunnels, with provisions for future light rail vehicle (LRV) adaptation, from South Station to New England Medical Center. The Silver Line is the MBTA's fifth transit line on the nation's oldest transit system and the first use of bus rapid transit (BRT). The BRT line will connect Roxbury, the South End and Chinatown to the city's commercial and services core as well as to the emerging South Boston Waterfront District and Logan International Airport.In addition to the tunnel design, the project includes strategic support for Federal Transit Administration submissions, extensive community participation and outreach services, operations, project controls and administration, systems design, station design and development, civil and environmental engineering and planning.URS's Boston office has been involved with the Silver Line project since its inception in the late 1980s, having completed the design for Phase I, and the conceptual design for Phases II and III. For Phase III, URS leads a design team that prepared a conceptual design report and cost estimate for the project. The report provided a conceptual design for the 1,650 m-long Silver Line tunnels from beneath the existing Green Line at Boylston Station to a new portal near Tremont and Oak Streets and for a new Silver Line Station at New England Medical Center. Construction is expected to start in 2006, with operations to commence in late 2010. The estimated construction cost is USD540 million. Visit www.allaboutsilverline.com and www.urscorp.com 04/04.



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United States, California - us/82

San Diego Water Supply

The San Diego County Water Authority has selected Jacobs Engineering Group to provide construction management and inspection services for the Lake Hodges Projects portion of the Emergency Storage Project. The Lake Hodges Projects include a 4.27 m-diameter high-pressure water transmission tunnel that spans 1,860 m and a 40 MW pump-turbine facility operating between two reservoirs. The contract, which covers four years, includes services during the pre-construction and construction phases of the project. Visit www.jacobs.com and www.sdcwa.org/infra/pdf/LakeHodges_FactSheet.pdf 46/03.



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United States, New York - us/81

Railway

The proposed rail freight tunnel that would run under the harbour from Brooklyn to New Jersey has received $2 million in federal funding to complete its Environmental Impact Study (EIS), and then begin preengineering work if the study proves favourable. Estimated costs for the construction of the tunnel range from $1 billion to more than $2 billion, based on the number of tracks that would run through the tunnel. One- and two-rail options are being explored. Read E-News Weekly # 46. 09/03.



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United States, Texas - us/80

Dallas Stormwater

The Dallas/Fort Worth (DFW) International Airport has awarded Affholder Inc. a $20.96 million tunnelling contract for the installation of 1.6 km of 2.75 m-diameter and 623 metres of 2.45 m-diameter storm drain in a soft rock tunnel bored with a 3.86 m-diameter Lovat TBM. Work start in October 2002 for completion in approximately 12 months. The project is part of a $2.6 billion programme to construct DFW's new international Terminal D. Visit www.insituform.com 43/02.



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United States, Iowa - us/79

Sewer

The City of Davenport is to decide about the design of a $22.2 million sewer tunnel by Stanley Consultants Inc. of Muscatine, Iowa who recommended it in 2001 as part of a $183 million sanitary scheme. The 1.5 m-diameter tunnel would run for 4.8 km on Davenport's west side from Duck Creek to the Mississippi river in a ravine roughly parallel to Howell Street. A 3.2 km section would be underground. Construction could begin in 2004. Visit www.ci.davenport.ia.us and www.stanleygroup.com/sci/index.html 42/02.



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United States, Texas - us/78

Brushy Creek Wastewater

The Austin-based Lower Colorado River Authority has begun work on a 2.1 km-long 2.8 m-diameter tunnel for a wastewater treatment plant in Williamson County. The TBM-driven tunnel runs from downtown Round Rock off State Highway 79, under I-35 and continues west of the Georgetown Railroad to connect previously installed upstream and downstream portions of the Brushy Creek Regional Wastewater System. The tunnel is needed for a 27.3 km system that will extend from the Cedar Park Wastewater Treatment Facility to the Brushy Creek Regional Wastewater Treatment Plant, adjacent to Highway 79 just east of the Dell Diamond. The tunnel will be constructed in a stiff, expansive clay and a competent limestone. A complex fault zone marking the contact between the two formations will be crossed. Tunnelling is expected to end in August 2003 and the Brushy Creek Wastewater System Project is to be completed by October 2004. Design by Brierley Associates and PBS&J. Visit www.lcra.org 39/02.



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United States, Michigan - us/77

Railway

C$450-million private sector financing sought by the Detroit River Tunnel Partnership (DRTP) as part of an estimated C$600 million (US$400 million) plan to convert the current twin-tube rail tunnel under the Detroit river across the border between Windsor, Ontario and Detroit, Michigan into a truck route and to build a new single-tube rail tunnel to accommodate all rail cars. Preliminary designs and preparatory work almost completed. DRTP is a partnership between Canadian Pacific Railway (CPR) and Borealis Transportation Infrastructure Trust (BTIT). The tunnel could be completed in early 2007. More info in E-News Weekly # 33. 36/02.



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