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Ground Breaks on High-Tech Lab
Senators Pete Domenici (R-N.M.) and Jeff Bingaman (D-N.M.)
were among the dignitaries who recently officiated at a ground-breaking
ceremony for a $15.5 million laboratory at Kirtland Air Force
Base.
K. L. House, Inc. of Albuquerque was awarded this contract
by the Albuquerque District of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers.
The Corps is supervising the contractor's design and construction
activities. The building is scheduled for completion in April
2004.
The 52,000-sq.-ft. facility will support the Air Force Research
Laboratory's Directed Energy Directorate in its advanced optical
research, laser propagation and space object imaging.
This new facility, called the Telescope and Atmosphere Compensation
Laboratory, will feature an aluminizing recoating capability
for large mirrors. One such mirror is the 3.5-meter primary
mirror on the directorate's largest telescope at Kirtland's
Starfire Optical Range. This recoating capability could also
be used on the large mirrors at local astronomical observatories.
Power Plant Lead Named
Trans-Elect's New Transmission Development (NTD) Company
recently announced that Houston-based Steag Power has stated
its interest in building a generation facility that will produce
up to 1,500-megawatts of electricity in the Four Corners area.
The company will also move its power over the Navajo Transmission
Project (NTP) being jointly developed by Trans-Elect's NTD
and the Navajo Nation's Dinè Power Authority (DPA).
Steag will take the lead in developing the generation project
and will seek additional partners.
Wilson Wins ABQ Work
Wilson & Company's Transportation Division has been awarded
design contracts for a major portion of Tingley Drive, which
will connect many of the cultural centers of Albuquerque,
including the Zoo, the Botanical Gardens, and the Hispanic
Cultural Center. The roadway design will take into account
the city's vision for a people mover light rail system that
would intersect the corridor.
Wilson & Company was also awarded the final design services
for the controversial Paseo del Norte four-lane roadway, which
will go through the eastern boundary of the Petroglyph National
Monument on the city's west side. The approximately 0.64 mile
corridor will provide much-needed infrastructure for the Westside
transportation system.
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