| On Track By
K. Robert Wendel Construction on the Valley's $1.6 billion light-rail
system is under way and on track.
Valley Metro Light Rail officials and
mayors from Tempe, Mesa, Phoenix and Glendale officially broke ground on the initial
20-mi. project in February.
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The Valley Metro Light Rail System begins at 19th Avenue and Bethany Home
Road in northern Phoenix with the first of 27 passenger stations. The light- rail
line jogs to the west at Camelback Road and 19th Avenue, moving along Camelback
before taking a turn to the south on Central Avenue.
The line heads west
again at Washington Street and follows that alignment to the Mill Avenue area,
where a bridge will carry the rail cars over Tempe Town Lake. The line then heads
south on Mill Avenue, jogging west on Terrace Avenue and then straightens out
on Apache Boulevard, continuing to the final stop on Sycamore Street and Apache
Boulevard/Main Street in Mesa.
Backers said the project would employ 50,000
people between design, construction and operation and would help downtown redevelopment
and development efforts in the four cities. "Every city struggles with an
urban core, but light rail has been a factor that has transformed cities where
it is built," said Valley Metro CEO Richard Simonetta. "In some of the
Western cities, you find development that could have occurred anywhere occurs
on the rail line.
Rail helps organize development in a corridor that can
sustain density."
The project is funded through a combination of bonds
issued by Phoenix, Mesa and Tempe, federal funds and sales tax revenue. Some cities
are using bonds for short term financing. More than 60 engineering and architecture
firms are involved, and once the project is moving along, 250 to 300 subcontractors
will be involved. Some of the contracts require a two-step proposal while others
are hard bid.
The massive project is being bid in five line packages, with
sections ranging from 2.27 mi. to 5.39 mi. in length. Each section is scheduled
to take two years to construct. Final build-out is 2008 on the initial part of
the system.
Tempe's Sundt Construction teamed with Stacey & Witbeck
in a joint venture and picked up the first section of rail work, a $53.6 million,
5.3-mi. leg running from 24th Street and Washington in Phoenix to Tempe Town Lake.
The engineer on this section, which is section 4, is the Phoenix office
Jacobs-Sverdrup, and the station architect is the Phoenix office of TransSystems.
No
contractors have been selected as of press time for the other four line sections.
Engineers include: the Phoenix-based AZTECH Engineering on section 1; David
Evans and Associates of Phoenix on section 2; the Phoenix office of Stantec Consulting
Inc. on Section 3, and the Phoenix office of HDR Inc. on section 5.
Stantec
is the lead engineer.
The station architects include: ART Architects of
Phoenix on section 1;
Phoenix-based Huitt Zollars Inc. on section 2; DWL
Architects and Planners of Phoenix on section 3; a joint venture between Tempe-based
Architekton and the Phoenix office of OTAK on section 5.
Architekton/OTAK
are the lead station architects.
The actual railway consists of two steel
tracks embedded in concrete. Original plans called for an application of gravel.
However, public concerns led designers to choose concrete, except in Mesa, where
ballast is used.
The system operates on two parallel tracks with the rails
protected by a curb.
The rails are standard gauge and the top of the rail
is flush with the pavement.
"We have strict vertical and horizontal
tolerances set by the Americans with Disabilities Act, so essentially what you
have is an embedded track with concrete poured around it so all you see is the
top of the rail," said Valley Metro operations manager Joe Marie. "The
rail is surrounded by a rubber boot that acts as an insulator to provide better
ride quality and reduce vibration. Shop Facility Under
Construction Sundt Construction and Stacy and Witbeck also started work
on the $57.6 million light- rail maintenance yard in the fall. The project features
a 138,200-sq.-ft. maintenance equipment building and a 13,600-sq.-ft. maintenance
of way building that supports the rails.
FNF Construction of Tempe completed
a $2.1 million bridge job that becomes the entrance for the new maintenance and
storage facility. The initial phase provides storage and facilities for
40 rail cars, with eventual plans calling for another phase to support 100 rail
cars. The light- rail system has purchased 36 vehicles from Japanese manufacturer
Kinkisharyo-Mitsui for $3.5 million each. Valley Metro has options for another
70 cars.
The rail cars can carry between 175 and 200 people, with each
car featuring two, 13,000- ton air- conditioning units that will keep the temperature
at 70 to 72 degrees, even on the hottest days.
The rail cars are connected
to an overhead copper power line hanging on 18-ft. poles. The power line features
an automatic tensioning system to compensate for the expansion and contraction
of the power wire because of heat. Fourteen substations along the route will convert
the regular electric load to 750 volts to power the train cars.
Boston-based
Mass Electric Construction Co. won the $56 million contract for the traction electrification
system.
The cars weigh 50 tons each, with initial plans to run two-car
configurations. Valley Metro officials said the cars would run 10 to 15 minutes
during peak load times and 20 to 30 minutes during off-peak times. Designers are
also planning for a three-minute schedule.
The cars can hit speeds up
to 55 mph, although 25 mph is an average speed.
"These trains are
very quiet," said Robert Ball, a project manager for Valley Metro. "They
are so quiet, that almost becomes a problem in itself." Motorists and
pedestrians may not see or hear the light rail cars.
Valley Metro officials
estimated the system would see 26,000 boarding's a day, with that number nearly
doubling to 50,000 by 2020. The system may be extended to north Phoenix and into
Glendale.
The light- rail project is using a "predictive priority"
system at intersections to prevent traffic back-ups and congestion. "The
predictive priority system is an interface between the train and the traffic and
will add time to the red light or decrease time to the green light," said
Valley Metro project engineer Bill Gustafson. "If the system goes wrong,
the train can stop, but you can steal 10 seconds from a traffic light cycle and
no one will notice. A Bridge Over Tempe Waters
At
Tempe Town Lake, the Tempe office of PCL Civil Constructors Inc. won the $21 million
contract to build a bridge spanning the lake, near the historic Union Pacific
Railroad Bridge. That project was awarded in February.
Plans call for a
1,500-ft. span sitting on cast-in-place piers topped off with structural steel
"V" trusses and a concrete roadway. Crews will sink 8-ft.- diameter
steel tubes that rest on bedrock below the lake's bottom. Water will be pumped
from the tubes, and then contractors will tie into the bedrock and cast the piers.
The bridge project features an interesting electronic art system utilizing
L.E.D. lights that can be programmed in a variety of ways.
"We have
an artist developing some programs to portray an artistic interpretation of the
bridge," Gustafson said. "One of the programs has the L.E.D. lights
chasing the train across the bridge and others are being developed." All
Aboard
The stations also showcase architectural features. Each station
is essentially the same type of construction, although every station reflects
on the character of its neighborhood. Designers were given a "kit of parts"
including steel, a tensile waterproof fabric and horizontal and vertical shading.
In
general the stations are 280- ft. long by 16 -ft. wide. Some of the stations are
in the middle of the street while others are on the side of the street.
Platforms
typically contain ticket vending machines, information on arrivals and departures,
benches, shelters, lighting and other amenities.
There is also an art
budget for the stations and centers. Each station has an estimated construction
budget of $1 million to $2 million. One overall contract will be let for a general
contractor for all of the stations.
The stations were designed with the
Valley's climate in mind and feature an extensive amount of shading. Designers
teamed with Arizona State University and did extensive research into materials
that could stand the test of time under the desert sun. Designers settled on a
polycarbonate coated and woven fiber fabric that doesn't gain a heat load.
"The
architects are given a kit of parts that are the same, but just like an erector
set, they can be put together in unique ways," said Steve Gottesmann, Valley
Metro's manager of architecture and urban design. "We have to keep these
stations maintainable and we also wanted to be consistent for budgetary reasons,
but this still allows architects to come up with some unique designs and still
be affordable."
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