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Old February 4th, 2006, 03:19 AM   #41
612bv3
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I just visited the CalTrans website and I found these new construction pictures.
























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Old February 4th, 2006, 03:29 AM   #42
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WEST APPROACH CONSTRUCTION PHOTOS from CalTrans




















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Old February 4th, 2006, 03:32 AM   #43
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Old February 4th, 2006, 03:42 AM   #44
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Caltrans loves to take pictures, huh?
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Old February 4th, 2006, 05:19 AM   #45
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nice update, thanks for pics
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Old February 4th, 2006, 05:30 AM   #46
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thanks for the Info

last dec I wetn there and see this bridge !
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Old February 4th, 2006, 06:35 AM   #47
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we need some aerial views of the new bridge. anyone have a helicopter?

btw, 612bv3, from when to when does that west approach diagram span?
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Old February 4th, 2006, 06:55 AM   #48
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Summer 2003 to Winter 2009.
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Old February 4th, 2006, 09:52 PM   #49
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Quote:
Originally Posted by dewback
Caltrans loves to take pictures, huh?
Yup, they like to show how much work they're doing, even though it's costing us a fortune.
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Old March 23rd, 2006, 01:53 AM   #50
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TOWERING QUESTION -- WILL IT FINALLY BE BUILT?

Planners hope the Bay Bridge's new eastern span, beset by political squabbles since the 1989 earthquake, has cleared its final hurdle


When state officials open construction bids on Wednesday to build the tower for the new eastern half of the Bay Bridge, the target date to finish work will be 2013 -- 24 years after the Loma Prieta earthquake snapped the upper deck apart.

Instead of an earthquake-proof bridge ready for traffic in 2004 as first promised, what exists today is a half-finished project that stands as a symbol of the Bay Area's political inability to come together as a region even when lives and livelihoods are at risk.

There's no way to recapture the years lost when Bay Area leaders failed to put aside their own agendas in order to construct a safe bridge that carries 280,000 vehicles a day. Those delays also are part of the reason the project's estimated cost has more than quadrupled to $6.3 billion.

In the meantime, the most important highway in the region still depends on a bridge that has been strengthened to withstand the sort of temblor that closed it for a month in 1989 -- but nothing more severe.

"We had a hard time from the get-go trying to focus people on the need for speed, that this was a matter of seismic safety," said Steve Heminger, executive director of the Metropolitan Transportation Commission. "I don't think we ever made that sale."

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When a magnitude 7.1 temblor struck the Bay Area on Oct. 17, 1989, the western half of the Bay Bridge, a brawny suspension bridge with four towers that march toward San Francisco from Yerba Buena Island, rode out the earthquake with little damage.
But the eastern half that lifts off from the mudflats of Oakland -- a trussed structure that resembles an enormous erector set -- had its seismic limitations exposed with deadly force. A 50-foot section of the upper deck collapsed onto the deck below. Two cars plunged into the chasm, and one driver was killed.

Though the bridge reopened in a month, six years passed before the California Department of Transportation decided that the eastern span should be replaced. First came the challenge of trying to find ways to retrofit a complicated 60-year-old structure. Top advisers to then-Gov. Pete Wilson, a Republican from San Diego, were wary of wading into the contentious thicket of Bay Area politics.

"They figured all of us in the Bay Area painted our faces blue at night and climbed trees," one engineer recalled with a laugh.

Eventually, Wilson and his advisers agreed with engineers that a new bridge was the way to go. It was with fanfare that Caltrans in February 1997 introduced the span it wanted to build: a utilitarian viaduct that would cost roughly $1 billion and could be ready for traffic by 2004.

Another bridge was shown that day, one with cables fanning down from a tower to the deck. But such a flourish would add at least $200 million to the project -- and the state made clear who would pay.

"If the residents of the Bay Area desire an aesthetically enhanced bridge," Wilson told reporters, "the additional cost should be borne by the Bay Area."

Bay Area politicians agreed to raise tolls for a so-called signature tower, but they upped the ante: They wanted to select a design on their own. Caltrans granted the request as long as the decision was made by July.

Decision-making power was handed to the Metropolitan Transportation Commission, which consists of elected officials from around the Bay Area and controls the region's transportation money. The commission promptly appointed a task force; the task force promptly assembled a panel of engineers and architects to provide technical guidance.

Then came the hard part.

Public attention focused on what the bridge should look like and whether it should have a bike lane. The thorniest issue, though, was the location of the new span.

It could run slightly south of the existing structure, but that would require land needed by the thriving Port of Oakland. Or it could run slightly to the north -- and crowd a cluster of historic buildings the Navy owned on Yerba Buena Island.

By July, the task force and panel had held 14 public meetings and made several key decisions. The span would be a viaduct across the muddy shallows near Oakland. Visual oomph would be provided by a tower over the deeper water near Yerba Buena Island. And it would follow the path known as the northern alignment.

But Caltrans didn't get what it asked for: an actual design.

Instead, the advisory panel asked Caltrans to perform design work on several different bridge types so it could evaluate the construction feasibility and seismic strength.

Caltrans dutifully hired consultants and returned eight months later with six different schemes. The panel whittled down the options until two remained, each featuring a tower rising like a flagpole between the eastbound and westbound decks.

One was a cable-stayed bridge, the type the state had proposed to begin with. The other was a self-anchored suspension bridge.

The self-anchored structure is similar to a traditional suspension bridge, in which the roadway hangs from a pair of cables suspended between towers. But instead of burying the ends of the cables into anchorages, a self-anchored suspension bridge folds them into its deck.

As the advisory panel second- and third-guessed each aspect of the design, seismic issues seemed far away.

"A lot of the focus on the panel was the idea of a signature span -- 'Let's get this big, significant thing done,' '' said Christopher Arnold, a Palo Alto architect on the panel.

"If the engineers had been more insistent about engineering, things might have been different. But they would mumble something, and then the architects would swing back to aesthetics."

With one meeting left to go, the cable-stayed bridge was favored.

So on the weekend before the final advisory-panel meeting in May 1998, the designers working on the suspension bridge repackaged their design -- moving the tower closer to the island to create an asymmetrical silhouette. They also moved the main cable so that it would loop underneath the deck near the island, an innovation that has never been tried.

The design was a major change and lacked the engineering details that the panel had insisted on 10 months earlier. But the unique appearance carried the day. By a 12-7 vote, the panel selected the suspension bridge.

"We all felt it was a challenging design -- it is -- but it can be done," said Joseph Nicoletti, an engineer who co-chaired the panel. "That's what makes it interesting to engineers."

Arnold backed the cable-stayed design. "The novelty factor kicked in, especially with the engineers," he said of the final vote. "And everyone was getting a bit tired by then."

The Metropolitan Transportation Commission made the choice official in June 1998, 15 months after the first task-force meeting. To make up for lost time, Caltrans set an ambitious schedule: Construction would begin in 2000, and opening day was set for 2004. The estimated cost: $1.4 billion.

The lone "no" vote came from Oakland Mayor Elihu Harris, who was unhappy that the entrance to Oakland would be a marked by a viaduct rather than a tower.

San Francisco's two members abstained -- an ominous hint of what lay ahead.



--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
It was at this point that the region's need for a seismically safe bridge confronted the hard fact of life that all politics are local.
In the Bay Area of the 1990s, nobody played hardball politics better than Mayor Willie Brown of San Francisco.

The mayor's stance on the bridge was no secret: Work on the eastern span should include projects tied to Brown's plans for his city. Most important, Brown wanted new ramps linking the bridge to Yerba Buena Island and Treasure Island, which the U.S. Navy was transferring to city ownership.

But as the selection process moved forward, San Francisco received little in the way of concessions. The tight ramps from Treasure Island onto the bridge remained, for instance, because Caltrans saw them as something other than a seismic problem.

Brown saw a slap in the civic face -- and prime development sites imperiled by outsiders.

"Our representatives were essentially losing every battle," Brown said recently. "There was clearly an indifference to any San Francisco consideration. How could you design a bridge that wiped out ingress and egress for a new neighborhood?"

Though Brown earlier had endorsed the northern alignment, he now said it wasn't acceptable. And he wasn't the only disgruntled politician: East Bay leaders chimed in with their own complaints.

In Oakland, the mayor-elect, Jerry Brown, called for an international competition to produce "a structure that people seek out from all over the world."

Oakland Assemblyman Don Perata called for a regional election on a design that he said was "about as popular as New Coke."

The mayors of Emeryville and Berkeley demanded that the design be changed to include room for commuter trains.

But Willie Brown had one tactical advantage his East Bay allies lacked: the aggressive support of the Navy.

Naval officials, supporting Willie Brown's position that a northern alignment would intrude on the former military base, took the position that state engineers could not enter Yerba Buena Island to collect soil samples or do site surveys. As long as this was the case, design work on the tower could not begin.

On one occasion, naval officials called Caltrans to order a boat filled with engineers out of Navy waters. Meanwhile, Willie Brown's point person for the islands was taking regional officials on tours of the island in a golf cart, pointing out the supposed perils of the northern alignment.

As far as Brown is concerned, he and the Navy were simply protecting their interests.

"They were totally indifferent to the owners of the property," Brown said of Caltrans and regional officials. "I probably wouldn't have paid any attention to anything other than getting the bridge built ... if the plans had been friendly to Treasure Island."

Robert Pirie, former assistant secretary of the Navy, now suggests the Navy was taking its cues from the San Francisco mayor.

"Our guidance at the time was to help the local authorities as much as possible," Pirie said this month. "It was a dispute between the city and county of San Francisco -- Willie Brown, mainly -- and Caltrans, and we were in the middle."

When Gray Davis became governor in January 1999, the official design appeared doomed. Davis had been Jerry Brown's chief of staff when Brown was governor in the late '70s. More recently, Willie Brown was the most influential politician to endorse Davis when his gubernatorial bid seemed a longshot.

Known for taking a cautious approach to controversial issues, Davis was in no rush to take a stand. But in March, he brushed off his allies' pleas: "It's been 10 years since the earthquake, and we need to fix the bridge."

As for complaints about the design, Davis agreed something grander would be nice. On the other hand, he said, "it would be nice if it rained beer, too."



--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
That should have ended the story: A new governor had ratified the outcome of a long public process.
Instead, the battle shifted to Washington, D.C. For the rest of 1999 and into 2000, Willie Brown and Davis pressed their cases before the Clinton administration. While one sought to block the plan, the other looked for ways to outflank the Navy. And White House staffers found themselves trying to make sense of a struggle rooted in engineering and economics 2,500 miles away.

"It was like a pendulum swinging back and forth," recalled Karen Skelton, who handled California issues for President Bill Clinton. "On one side, you had issues involving architecture, historic preservation, economic development ... on the other side was safety."

As his push to move the span stalled, Brown changed course. He called for a retrofit of the existing bridge instead of building a new one. And he added safety to his issues by seizing on one expert's claim that the approved tower was inherently unstable.

The warnings came from Abolhassan Astaneh-Asl, a UC Berkeley engineering professor. In 1997, when the search began for a new design, Astaneh attracted attention as part of a team proposing a sail-like tower. The proposal was rejected.

Now he insisted that because the self-anchored bridge's cable lacked a conventional anchorage, any severe jolt might cause it to collapse.

Caltrans dismisses Astaneh's thesis, as do seismic engineering experts. But Brown met with Astaneh and gravely pronounced the professor's claims "frightening, really frightening."

He also arranged a Washington meeting at which Astaneh could present his scenario to federal officials.

Meanwhile, Davis' staff and Caltrans engineers made the Beltway rounds looking for support. But California's congressional delegation showed no desire to intervene in what from afar looked like a dispute between the top-ranked Democrat in the state and the renowned power-broker whom the president himself once had dubbed "the real Slick Willie."

Sen. Dianne Feinstein was seen as the one state figure with the stature to break the impasse. She was lobbied by both sides -- and then called for studies of an additional bridge from the East Bay that could serve drivers headed south of San Francisco.

Nor were members of the congressional delegation, including Sens. Feinstein and Barbara Boxer, trying to smooth things out behind the scenes. "I had absolutely zero interaction with Boxer or Feinstein on the subject," Pirie recalled, "or any congressional representative."

What finally dislodged the impasse was a legal move by the federal Department of Transportation.

Skelton left the White House to become chief counsel for Transportation Secretary Rodney Slater. There, she learned that the department could seize other agencies' land to make improvements to the nation's highway system.

The Bay Bridge is part of Interstate 80.

"It was a dusty old law," said Skelton, now a political consultant, "but it was still on the books for a purpose."

In the summer of 2000, the White House approved the transfer of land on Yerba Buena Island from the Navy to the highway administration so seismic work could be done on I-80 where it crosses San Francisco Bay.

Brown is now philosophical about the outcome. "At that stage of the game, we had played our hand out."



--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
When the suspension bridge design was chosen in 1998, engineers planned to start on the tower first. That way it would be finished at the same time as the viaduct, which is easier to build.
Instead, the impasse that kept engineers off Yerba Buena Island forced Caltrans to begin the viaduct first. This would have extended the construction schedule by two years even if everything else had gone as planned.

They didn't. The delays of the late '90s pushed the project into a much different environment than the one in which it was conceived.

The terrorists who destroyed the World Trade Center on Sept. 11, 2001, made it difficult and pricey to insure high-profile projects such as bridges.

A prolonged construction boom in Asia caused the price of steel and concrete to soar. In the United States, other public works projects moved into line ahead of the Bay Bridge.

The unstated assumption of the eastern span saga -- that the world would wait for the Bay Area to make up its mind and resolve its disputes -- was proved wrong.

The latest delays came after the state invited contractors to compete to build the signature tower; the complex design and boom times elsewhere help explain why only one bidder stepped forward. And the lone bid in 2004 was $1.8 billion -- more than twice the budgeted amount.

Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger halted work on the foundation and called for a simpler design, but a funding compromise with the state Legislature last summer allowed the tower to proceed.

State officials hope that this will be the last substantial hurdle and that the new span will open in 2013. The projected price: $6.3 billion, nearly $5 billion above the 1998 estimate.

In the meantime, a major earthquake on either the San Andreas Fault or the Hayward Fault grows closer by the day. The only question is when it will occur -- and whether the cost of the delays on the Bay Bridge will be measured in dollars or lives.



--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Bay Bridge timeline
1936: Bay Bridge opens. The upper deck is for automobiles, the lower deck for trains. Daily traffic is 21,000 vehicles.

1958: Train tracks are removed from bridge, clearing both decks for cars. Daily traffic is 53,000 vehicles.

Oct. 17, 1989: Loma Prieta earthquake snaps a section of the eastern span, killing one driver. Bridge is repaired within a month. Daily traffic is 286,000 vehicles.

December 1996: A panel of seismic experts concludes the eastern span should be replaced rather than retrofitted.

February 1997: Gov. Pete Wilson administration announces it wants to build an elevated skyway from Oakland to Yerba Buena Island that can be ready in seven years if everything goes smoothly. The administration also offers to build a more distinctive cable-stayed bridge if the Bay Area is willing to pay the extra cost. In either event, says Caltrans Director James W. van Loben Sels, "we must move ahead quickly on a solution that ensures the motoring public's safety."

March 18, 1997: The first meeting of the Bay Bridge Design Task Force takes place. The task force was created to select the design that Bay Area elected officials have agreed to finance through higher tolls on local bridges. It consists of six elected officials and one member of the San Francisco Bay Conservation and Development Commission. It is led by Alameda County Supervisor Mary King, who says her job is "to develop a consensus recommendation on a design option" -- in other words, "chocolate fudge on top of the vanilla ice cream bridge that the governor guaranteed us."

July 1997: Mayor Willie Brown of San Francisco writes King, stating that he supports placing the new span north of the existing bridge because "the economic development opportunities to the Port of Oakland outweigh the economic opportunities to San Francisco at Yerba Buena Island."

The Metropolitan Transportation Commission sends 17 recommendations to Caltrans. One recommendation: Delay choice of a design until Caltrans takes several bridge schemes to "approximately the 30 percent design stage so that reliable information as to seismic performance, cost, visual design and other issues can be obtained."

May 1998: Advisory panel of engineers and architects recommends a suspension bridge with five lanes of traffic hanging from each side of a 525-foot tower. The panel also recommends a 12-foot-wide lane for pedestrians and bicycles -- the result of a tenacious lobbying campaign by bicycle advocates.

June 1998: Ten East Bay elected officials send a letter to King complaining that the task force "has not produced a world-class design that establishes a sense of gateway and place for the East Bay."

Mayor-elect Jerry Brown of Oakland makes the same complaint in a Chronicle opinion piece, saying the approved design "speaks of mediocrity, not greatness. ... We must create a spectacular structure that expresses the daring of human ingenuity and symbolizes the splendor of Oakland and the East Bay."

June 24, 1998: The commission selects the suspension bridge, which has an estimated cost of $1.4 billion and a 2004 opening date. But Treasure Island-friendly ramps are left out of the project.

July 1998: Willie Brown now says a northern alignment will be ruinous to Yerba Buena Island -- and the Navy bars Caltrans from visiting the island to collect geological information. This makes it impossible to begin design of the tower or the western end of the eastern span.

November 1998: Residents of San Francisco, Oakland, Emeryville and Berkeley vote that passenger rail service should be "part of the redesign of the Bay Bridge" -- an advisory measure initiated by Willie Brown.

February 1999: The Bay Bridge Design Task Force and its advisory panel reconvene to hear the complaints being made by San Francisco and the Navy.

The approved design "is hopelessly delayed due to a variety of factors," says Annemarie Conroy, Mayor Willie Brown's project manager for Treasure Island. With her is Rear Adm. Ronne Froman, who says the Navy will oppose the approved alignment because "the proposed northern alignment effectively destroys the ability of the city to redevelop the Yerba Buena property to its fullest potential." Neither Conroy nor Froman mentions the potential danger of earthquakes.

March 1999: New Gov. Gray Davis says he supports the approved design.

July 1999: Davis sends a letter to the secretary of the Navy protesting "the Navy's refusal to permit geological testing on Yerba Buena Island," because "every day of delay in completing this seismic safety project courts another disaster."

May 2000: With the approval of White House Chief of Staff John Podesta, the Department of Transportation takes the disputed land on Treasure Island from the U.S. Navy and clears the way for the approved design to proceed.

2002: Construction begins on the new eastern span. But with the estimated cost now at $2.6 billion, and a target opening date of 2007, state legislators demand explanations for the setbacks. A California State Auditor report attributes part of the problem to the Bay Area's choice of a "signature" design. It also says that as a result of actions by the Navy, "the design and environmental process for the eastern span was delayed by nearly two years."

May 2004: The lone bid to build the eastern span's tower is $1.8 billion -- more than twice the $733 million most recently projected. Bridge estimate now tops $5.5 billion. The Schwarzenegger administration rejects the bid.

December 2004: Schwarzenegger proposes making the entire bridge a skyway, saying that changing the design can save $400 million and trim a year off the construction schedule -- even though the proposed scheme has neither a design nor environmental approvals.

June 2005: State Legislature approves $4 bridge toll beginning in 2007 that will allow the tower to remain; as a result, Bay Area commuters will pay 80 percent of the bridge project, rather than the 50 percent originally agreed upon.

March 22, 2006: State to open new bids from construction firms to build eastern span tower.
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Old March 23rd, 2006, 02:01 AM   #51
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TOWERING QUESTION -- WILL IT FINALLY BE BUILT?

Planners hope the Bay Bridge's new eastern span, beset by political squabbles since the 1989 earthquake, has cleared its final hurdle






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Old March 27th, 2006, 06:45 AM   #52
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I was on it this saturday going towards SF, which meant I was on it for a long time (although not nearly as long as I was waiting in the maze grrrrrr). and got to check out the progress, which isnt bad. No pics though, didnt have camera or I would have
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Old March 27th, 2006, 04:04 PM   #53
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WOW! One more beautiful bridge in our city, I'm very happy to see it in the progress of construction, hope we'll see it soon built
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Old March 27th, 2006, 04:58 PM   #54
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If you think that is bad, dont ever go to Boston.....its much worse here. Our highway project started in 1984 and is still incomplete.
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Old April 5th, 2006, 05:41 AM   #55
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Bay Bridge bids studied in haste
Come what may, eastern portion won't be completed until at least 2013

By Erik N. Nelson, STAFF WRITER
Inside Bay Area
With a $1.43 billion low bid in hand for the long-delayed signature span of the Bay Bridge, Caltrans is working double time to verify the details of the bid by a joint venture whose members have built some of the world's more impressive structures, including the original Bay Bridge, which opened in 1936 six months ahead of schedule.

Caltrans also will scrutinize the much higher bid by a consortium led by Bay Bridge skyway builder Kiewit Pacific Co., which, even if it doesn't win, could earn the group a $5 million stipend.

Delayed a decade by politics, over-optimistic cost estimates and the Bay Area's aesthetic sensibilities, the project could be launched by late April. Construction on the final phase of the $6.3 billion effort to build a more earthquake-worthy bridge connecting Oakland to Yerba Buena probably won't begin for another year, however, and won't be completed until 2013 — 24 years after a roadway on the eastern span collapsed, during the 1989 Loma Prieta earthquake. The event killed a motorist and prompted the effort to provide a stronger Bay Bridge.

To meet that commitment of vetting the project's two bids within 30 days — half the normal period — the transportation agency's bridge experts are now poring over cost estimates, blueprints and subcontractors' curricula Vitae. They have to check thousands of calculations and assumptions that went into the likely winning bid by Pennsylvania-based American Bridge Co. and its Orange County-based joint venture partner, Fluor Corp.

"The key is to find out whether they are competent, credible contractors," said Bart Ney, Caltrans' spokesman for Bay Bridge projects. But both groups that submitted bids are well-known both in bridge-building circles and the realm of massive public works projects.

American Bridge boasts building the largest structures in the world, and then repeating the same feat. Founded in 1870, in 1929 the company's ironworkers bolted and welded together New York's Chrysler Building, then the world's tallest building. In 1971, American started building the Sears Tower in Chicago, which would rise to a world-topping 1,454 feet. Among its California projects are the old Carqinez Strait bridges, built in 1927 and 1958, and Disneyland's Matterhorn rollercoaster in 1959.

The old Bay Bridge itself, despite its better-known Golden Gate cousin, was considered one of the engineering wonders of the world for decades after its 1936 opening.

Asked whether he felt the low bid proved the state should have taken the lone bid two years ago, American Bridge Chief Executive Officer Bob Luffy said he'd rather worry about getting the project into gear.

"We don't waste time on vindication," Luffy said. "A lot of people felt we had a very fat job and we hadn't bid it squarely or fairly. The fact is, we bid it straight. We always do."

Kiewit, besides coming in with a much higher $1.68 billion bid, is known locally for the $1 billion skyway project, which has been troubled with delays, cost overruns and even an FBI criminal investigation — since dropped — into charges that welders were rushed to the point of compromising bridge integrity and worker safety. Kiewit is also part of the joint venture doing Boston's "Big Dig" highway project, widely seen as one of history's worst examples of public works run amok.

Kiewit, "as a matter of company policy," does not comment on any bid until the project has been awarded, said Kent Grisham, spokesman for the Vancouver, Wash.-based company.

Caltrans officials will scrutinize both bids to make sure they are realistic and comply with contract requirements, Ney said.

"We are going to be looking to make sure that their bonding is in place. We'll be making sure that their subcontractors are prequalified where needed." The bids also will have to make an effort to provide work for businesses run by disabled veterans and comply with all state and federal contract laws, Ney said.

After receiving a lone $1.4 billion bid in 2004, Caltrans' planners went to great lengths to encourage other bidders. They offered the $5 million stipend, they extended bidding and construction deadlines and met with interested contractors in Japan, China and other far-flung locales to sell the project and make clear what California needed in a suspension bridge.

After the contract is awarded at an event Caltrans is already planning, the winning contractor will begin setting up offices in Caltrans' construction yard on Burma Road in the shadow of the Bay Bridge approach ramps.

Ney said the stipend was not unprecedented, but by presstime did not provide any other examples where losing Caltrans project bidders were paid several million dollars.

The planned 1,800-foot-long eastern suspension span, with its uncommon self-anchored design and tower rising more than 500 feet above the water, will contain enough steel to build 10 Eiffel Towers, according to a Caltrans fact sheet. The bridge will connect the 1.5-mile skyway, now under construction, to Yerba Buena Island and the already-retrofitted western suspension span that connects the island to San Francisco.
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Old April 27th, 2006, 02:10 AM   #56
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BAY BRIDGE CONSTRUCTION UPDATE: PHOTOS

FROM OAKLAND TO YERBA BUENA




FROM YERBA BUENA TO OAKLAND




ABOVE OAKLAND



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Old April 27th, 2006, 02:18 AM   #57
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BAY BRIDGE CONSTRUCTION UPDATE: RENDERINGS


New Eastern Span looking North


Aerial View


View from Below


View from deck of the new Eastern Span looking towards Oakland


View from Pedestrian Path looking towards Yerba Buena Island


View from deck of the new Eastern Span at Night

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Old April 27th, 2006, 03:22 AM   #58
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The Self-Anchored Suspension Span:
Project Overview


Located east of Yerba Buena Island (YBI), the Self-Anchored Suspension (SAS) span will be the signature span of the new Bay Bridge. Traditional main cable suspension bridges have twin cables with smaller suspender cables connected to them, which hold up the roadbed and are anchored to separate structures in the ground. There is only one main cable on the new Self-Anchored Suspension (SAS) span, which will be anchored to the deck itself and will wrap around the west end of the structure and connect back into the deck.

The SAS will be aligned to the north of the existing bridge, providing motorists traveling eastbound and westbound on the new East Span expansive views of San Francisco Bay Area. The design features state-of-the-art seismic safety elements and will provide the East Span with a modern, streamlined appearance. When complete, it will be the largest single tower, self-anchored suspension bridge in the world. The span will provide new vistas for motorists traversing the bridge, as they pass under an angled canopy of suspension cables. Because the East Span will have two parallel decks, motorists will enjoy panoramic views of the East Bay while traveling eastbound, and of the San Francisco skyline and the Marin Headlands while traveling westbound.

The new Self-Anchored Suspension span is meant to echo the existing towers of the West Span, as well as the towers on the Golden Gate Bridge. All vertical elements of the span, including the tower, piers and lights, have been designed to emphasize the clean modern lines of the structure. To add to its distinctiveness, the asymmetrical suspension span will have a longer forward span (east of the tower), which will provide a more gradual transition from the gently sloping Skyway, and will give the new East Span a unique silhouette. The single steel tower is the same height as the highest tower on the bridge’s West Span.

Rising 525 feet above mean sea level and embedded in rock, the single-tower span is designed to withstand ground motions caused by a massive earthquake. The four separate legs will be connected by linker beams, which function in the same way as a fuse in an electrical circuit. The linker beams will absorb most of the impact from an earthquake, preventing damage to the tower legs. In addition, if one of the legs is damaged, the other legs will keep the bridge standing.
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Old April 27th, 2006, 06:53 AM   #59
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So the causeway has lots or work down but no visible anything from the tower yet huh

Last edited by Scruffy88; April 27th, 2006 at 09:08 AM.
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Old April 27th, 2006, 07:32 AM   #60
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yes, thats correct. The skyway is around 90% complete now.

And the first adjoining part of the tower's cables was installed on February 8th-9th. It is a 1700 ton steel section, placed on the eastbound direction, on the side of construction closest to Yerba Buena Island. it was cast in portland, Oregon, and placed on a barge down to the Bay.

if you look at the second group of pictures i posted, heading from the island back to Oakland, in the first pics you can see that the farthest section of the eastbound side is a darker grey than the rest of the bridge; thats because its made of steel.

thats the only "part" of the tower complete thus far, the adjoining section of one suspension cable .

not to worry though, the bridge will be ready for traffic in 2013, a quarter century after the old one was deemed seismically lacking!!!
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