Tag Archive | "Hoover Dam Bypass Bridge"

California man fulfills dream of visiting dam, new bridge


Special to the Boulder City Review

California resident Marion Cook had been to Hoover Dam years ago, but he wanted to visit it one more time to see the new Mike O’Callaghan-Pat Tillman Memorial Bridge.

On April 27, Cook boarded a private plane in Visalia, Calif., heading for parts unknown. In Boulder City, the 88-year-old was met by his sister and her husband from Missouri, an unexpected surprise.

The group embarked on a raft tour of Hoover Dam and the Colorado River by Kathleen Wood from Black Canyon/Willow Beach River Adventures.

“This dam has a lot of great history and breathtaking views,” Cook said. “I wanted to visit the Hoover Dam to see the new bridge. I have been to 21 countries and four different islands and this beats everything yet.”

The trip was put together by “Dreams Come True,” a program run by California-based Magnolia Health Corp., which owns Twin Oaks Assisted Living Center where Cook lives.

California resident Marion (Sarge) Cook, left, is pictured with his brother-in-law, Adrian Carlson, visiting the new Hoover Dam bypass bridge on Wednesday, April 27. The 88-year-old Cook had his wish of seeing the new structure granted by "Dreams Come True," a program by California-based Magnolia Health Corp.

Magnolia Chief Executive Officer Kenny Moyle said the trip was coordinated with the Boulder City Chamber of Commerce, which put Magnolia in contact with Wood.

“We started planning this dream a couple months ago.” Moyle said. “Sarge has been a resident at Twin Oaks Assisted Living Center for several years and has expressed his desire to visit the Hoover Dam many times.”

Posted in NewsComments (0)

Hardy’s toll road bill passes Senate: Bill now moves to Assembly


By Arnold M. Knightly, Boulder City Review

The Boulder City Bypass took a big step forward Tuesday night with the state Senate passing a bill directing the state Transportation Department to establish a public-private partnership to finance a toll road around the city.

Senate Bill 214, authored by Sen. Joe Hardy of Boulder City, passed by a vote of 19-2.

The bill will now move to the Assembly where it will likely be referred to the Assembly Transportation Committee, according to a Nevada Department of Transportation spokesman.

{+}

The rest of this article is available to premium members only.
Login or Become a member

Posted in NewsComments (0)

Traffic woes ensare buses: BC route has become unreliable


By Arnold M. Knightly, Boulder City Review

You don’t need to tell local resident Tony Radford that Boulder City’s public bus system has become less reliable since the Hoover Dam Bypass Bridge opened Oct. 19. He knows.

Radford, who has ridden the Boulder City route for three years, said the bus runs continually behind schedule, as much as an hour, since traffic increased.

“Usually, it was on time up until that bridge opened up,” Radford said Friday after exiting the bus near Nevada Highway and Buchanan Avenue. “Now you can’t depend on it. When the traffic is bad, it just comes when it comes. It’s random.”

{+}

The rest of this article is available to premium members only.
Login or Become a member

Posted in NewsComments (0)

City, state agencies to increase pressure on feds to keep commercial vehicles out of BC


By Arnold M. Knightly, Boulder City Review

The city is continuing its effort to pressure the Federal Highway Administration to declare “emergency exemption” to keep commercial truck from crossing the bypass bridge due to the heavy traffic on the highway through town.

At a morning press conference, Boulder City Mayor Roger Tobler said the city has partnered with Regional Transportation Commission of Southern Nevada and Nevada Department of Transportation in asking federal officials to reroute the trucks back onto U.S. Highway 95 until a permanent solution is in place.

It would be the same route trucks used after the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001 until the Hoover Dam Bypass Bridge opened Oct. 19.

The long-term solution, according to RTC General Manager Jacob Snow is to reposition the discussion about the Boulder City Bypass route to part of the Interstate 11 federal highway proposal so the project could become a federal funding priority.

The estimated cost to build the bypass would be $360 million if it was started today, said Rudy Malfabon, deputy director of Southern Nevada for the state transportation department. He added that the cost will increase the longer the project takes to get funded.

Snow said an estimated 34,000 vehicles pass through the city every day, an increase of nearly 1,000 vehicles before the bypass bridge opened. The congestion problem is due to the nearly 1,100 large trucks that can now use the route that was closed to them when the highway crossed Hoover Dam.

While that number doesn’t seem like a lot, trucks move at a slower, more deliberate pace that causes traffic to slow. The bypass bridge opening also now allows other non-commercial trucks that were banned prior – including moving vans, certain buses, ect. – to now use the route.

Posted in NewsComments (0)

First real numbers on bypass bridge traffic: a lot


By Thomas Finn, Boulder City police chief

A few days ago I attended a quarterly meeting of all the entities responsible for the maintenance of the new Hoover Dam Bypass Bridge, as well as the agencies having jurisdictional responsibilities for law enforcement and investigative services.

Although the bridge is not within Boulder City’s jurisdiction, we are clearly impacted by the traffic headed to the dam and the bridge. I’ve attended the meetings for the past four years to ensure that our city’s public safety interests are protected.

{+}

The rest of this article is available to premium members only.
Login or Become a member

Posted in NewsComments (0)

The bridge, school zones, and a big shout-out


Boulder City Police Chief Thomas Finn, Public Safety

Last Saturday the walking tour of the new Hoover Dam Bypass Bridge took place, and despite the predictions of up to 40,000 visitors, less than 15,000 people took advantage of the opportunity.

Law enforcement agencies from throughout the Las Vegas Valley developed and participated in a well-coordinated plan to control traffic and ensure the safety of the participants.

I worked the entire day on the road with 15 other Boulder City officers assigned to work the event, and I’m happy to report that it was a flawless day. Boulder City’s finest heavily patrolled the truck route and issued dozens of speeding citations to those who ignored the 45 mph posted speed limit. Radar and laser enforcement sent out a loud and clear message that exceeding the speed limit will not be tolerated.

{+}

The rest of this article is available to premium members only.
Login or Become a member

Posted in NewsComments (0)

Photo project captures bridge construction


By Jack Johnson, Boulder City Review

It’s been better late than never for the New Mexico-based photographer who has worked to document the building of the Mike O’Callaghan-Pat Tillman Memorial Bridge.

It all started in early 2009 when Jamey Stillings set out on a westward photography excursion to the Mojave Desert from his Santa Fe home.

“I hit a slow time, and said, ‘Time to go out and take some pictures.’”

There were a number of locations Stillings planned on shooting, including the Nevada Solar One power plant in Eldorado Valley.

{+}

The rest of this article is available to premium members only.
Login or Become a member

Posted in NewsComments (0)

Environmental impact minimized: Bypass bridge touches surroundings lightly


By Tony Illia, Special to Boulder City Review

The Hoover Dam Bypass is a challenge-filled construction saga that rivals the building of the historic dam itself.

North America’s longest single-arch concrete crossing, at 1,960 feet, now soars 870 feet over the Colorado River. It carries vehicles a quarter mile downstream from Hoover Dam, and answers a need that dates back to the 1960s.

Plans for a bridge began with the dam’s landlord, the Bureau of Reclamation, which organized a meeting about building an alternate crossing free of hairpin turns.

In 1993, as the draft environmental impact statement was nearing completion, the agency switched its focus from major public works construction to water resource management.

{+}

The rest of this article is available to premium members only.
Login or Become a member

Posted in NewsComments (0)

BC braces for bridge’s impact: Traffic increase primary concern


By Arnold M. Knightly, Boulder City Review

The opening of the Hoover Dam Bypass Bridge will bring a new set of safety concerns to the region, but will alleviate others, law enforcement officials said.

The most obvious change will be the return of large commercial trucks to the area. Since Sept. 11, 2001, tractor-trailers have been barred from crossing Hoover Dam due to terrorist concerns. The trucks were redirected nearly 30 miles through Laughlin; many came up U.S. Highway 95 and headed into Henderson by Railroad Pass.

The bridge will create several concerns, authorities said.

– Traffic into town. The bridge increases safety concerns along U.S. Highway 93, especially along the nearly 5-mile stretch from where the bridge traffic enters the highway near the Hacienda down to the U.S. 93-Buchanan Boulevard intersection.

{+}

The rest of this article is available to premium members only.
Login or Become a member

Posted in NewsComments (0)

Engineering marvel is ‘dam’ good: Monumental efforts required for O’Callaghan-Tillman bridge


By Tony Illia, Special to Boulder City Review

Hoover Dam is an awe-inspiring, engineering marvel whose construction has become the stuff of folklore. That sense of engineering bravado is back with a new bridge.

It, too, required a monumental construction effort. Like its neighbor, the bridge is also a monumental project built during a deep recession.

The official name is the Mike O’Callaghan-Pat Tillman Memorial Bridge, named after former Nevada Governor Mike O’Callaghan (1971-’79) and professional football star turned slain soldier Pat Tillman.

The dam was the largest structure of its kind 75 years ago. The 1,960-foot long bridge achieves a similar distinction as North America’s longest single-arch concrete span.

“It’s a well-known project in the engineering community,” Khaled Mahmoud, chairman of the New York City-based Bridge Engineering Association, said. “It’s the longest concrete single-arch bridge in North America, and the fourth longest in the world.”

The sleek, elegant structure stretches across Black Canyon in a single span, soaring 890 feet above the Colorado River.

The concrete-and-steel composite bridge has an iconic significance due to its commercial importance and proximity to the dam.

Yet, there is more to the $240 million project than meets the eye. Like Hoover Dam, which required nitty-gritty foundation work and diversion tunnels, the bridge similarly entails complicated but less visible site construction.

The components, though less spectacular, play crucial roles in the overall bridge program.

There are new four-lane roadways at each bridge end that tie into U.S. Highway 93, for example. The 1.8-mile-long Arizona approach, which finished in October 2004, has a small 900-foot-long bridge that spans a 200-foot-deep ravine on the east side of Sugarloaf Mountain.

It additionally has a new intersection at the Hoover Dam Access and Kingman Wash roads.

The 2.11-mile Nevada approach, meanwhile, finished in October 2005, roughly two months ahead of schedule. It consists of six new bridges over rocky terrain that includes a 463-foot-long, steel-girder structure over a 160-foot-deep gulch.

There is also a new four-lane highway alignment and a new traffic interchange at U.S. 93 near the Hacienda Casino.

The Arizona half was built by R.E. Monks Construction Inc. of Fountain Hills, Ariz., with Chino Valley, Ariz.-based Vastco Inc., while Edward Kraemer & Sons Inc., of Plain, Wis., did the Nevada side.

Eight large steel-lattice power towers carrying 230-kilovolt and 440-kilovolt electrical lines were also relocated away from the bridge path. The $9.6 million job was completed by Kansas City-based Par Electrical Contractors in 2003.

The bridge, meanwhile, was as big and complicated as it gets. A joint-venture led by San Francisco-based Obayashi Corp., with PSM Construction USA Inc., of Brisbane, Calif., won the contract in 2004 with a $114 million low bid. Its proposed cableway bridge-erection method helped it cinch the deal.

The contractor used four 330-foot-tall steel towers, two pairs on each side of the Black Canyon, with 2,500-foot-long, 3-inch-diameter cableways strung in between.

Bridge segments were moved into place using trollies attached to cables, or “high lines,” as workers called them. It’s essentially like a heavy-duty clothes line capable of carrying 50 tons worth of building materials.

A similar system was used during the construction of Hoover Dam. It’s the most practical way to move things over the canyon’s treacherous terrain and sheer drop offs. The high lines work something like an arcade game where players maneuver a mechanical claw over an item, lift it, and drop it into place.

“Cableways aren’t a common thing to use in bridge construction, but you’re dealing with a construction site that is 800 feet about water level,” said Mahmoud, who also serves as president of New York City-based Bridge Technology Consulting.

Not everything ran smoothly. In September 2006, the cableways collapsed under 55 mph winds, bringing construction to a standstill. The incident delayed bridge construction by two years.

Both the owner and contractor declined to comment further on the troubles. But, a replacement cableway system was designed and built from scratch by Cincinnati-based F&M Mafco. It was based on the original design but used “heavier components,” said Obayashi’s project manager Jim Stevens. The project soon found its stride again.

The 88-foot-wide bridge soars 870 feet above the Colorado River, a quarter mile downstream from the dam. The elegant structure is composed of reinforcing steel struts between twin concrete arch ribs. Struts add ductility to the lateral framing system for extreme seismic loads.

The bridge’s concrete deck and steel box girders are supported on 440 precast-concrete spandrel columns, each averaging 10 feet in length and stacked up to 280 feet high from the canyon floor.

The striking, 277-foott-deep twin-rib arch consists of 104 segments, each about 25 feet long. The bridge marks the culmination of several interlinking construction and design contracts, and years of planning and coordination.

Construction created 1,200 direct and indirect jobs. Yet, the economic impact of not building it is $100 million annually, the Federal Highway Administration said.

Talks for an alternate route over the dam dates back to the 1960s. U.S. Highway 93 currently runs over the crest of the dam, and often gets congested with traffic.

The route additionally has switchbacks and abrupt inclines that create safety concerns. The two-lane roadway, a key route in the North America Free Trade Agreement between the United States, Mexico and Canada, sees 17,000 vehicles daily.

It has also been identified as a high priority corridor in the National Highway System Designation Act of 1995, and it’s a part of the Canamex corridor linking Canada to Mexico. After the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks, security for the nation’s infrastructure and monuments was increased.

Truck traffic has since been diverted 23 miles away from the dam, costing consumers some $30 million annually. Other commercial four-lane routes add an additional 250 miles.

“Right now, our guys cannot go over the dam. They have to go through Laughlin instead,” Nevada Motor Transport Association Chief Executive Officer Paul Enos said. “The bridge is important for more efficiently moving commerce and goods throughout the West. It benefits everybody. There is nothing in society today that trucks don’t move, including clothes, food, and medicine.”

The bridge opens U.S. 93 as a major corridor in the movement of manufactured materials. Trucks currently deliver products and goods to 80 percent of all U.S. communities.

Rising fuel costs, growing gridlock and increased emissions standards could see more trucks abandoning Interstate 5 in California in favor of U.S. 93, which is characterized by long straight stretches with few steep grades.

“The new bridge will eliminate the sharp turns, narrow roadways, inadequate shoulders and low travel speeds of the existing travel route,” Federal Highway Administration project manager Dave Zanetell said. “This is really a historic project that has been a long time in the making.”

Tony Illia is a freelance writer focusing on the construction industry. He can be reached at tonyillia@aol.com or 702-303-5699.

The Hoover Dam Bypass Bridge will be officially dedicated today with memebers of the O’Callaghan and Tillman families in attendance.

U.S. Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood will dedicate the Mike O’Callaghan-Pat Tillman Memorial Bridge at 10 a.m.

Federal Highway Administrator Victor Mendez and Arizona Gov. Jan Brewer will attend, as will Sen. Harry Reid and Rep. Dina Titus.

Nevada Lt. Gov. Brian Krolicki will attend on behalf of Gov. Jim Gibbons, who is still recovering from injuries sustained in a horse-riding accident.

It will be Saturday, however, when the bridge receives its first crush of curious onlookers onto its surface.

Nearly 20,000 people are expected to come to the bridge during a public party thrown by the Federal Highway Administration.

Bridging America is scheduled to run from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. Reservations for the event were closed at 14,000. However, people involved with the event said no one will be turned away if their name is not on a list.

The event will feature a kids’ activity area, and other interactive displays explaining the history and building of the bridge.

The main attraction will be the 1,900-foot walkway on the Hoover Dam side of the bridge giving people a view of the historic dam previously only available from helicopters.

Posted in NewsComments (0)