Trends Summer 2014 | Page 12

Federal transportation enhancement funding financed the $14.6 million project. Steve Norton, a project engineer with American Bridge, the designbuild contractor for the project, finds great satisfaction in hearing positive comments about the completed trail bridge – a project that tested him and his crews with an aggressive schedule. “Being late wasn’t an option,” Norton said. “We threw all our resources at it and worked seven days a week, many weeks in a row. We did what it took to finish the job.” Sticking to the schedule The project Request for Proposal allowed a maximum of 650 days for design and construction. The design-build team proposed an aggressive 450 days. Weekly project meetings occurred on the design and construction sides, and reviews were performed quickly and efficiently 12│TRENDS Safety First The Courtney Campbell Multiuse Trail Bridge, open only to non-vehicular traffic, provides a safer and more recreationally based travel alternative across Old Tampa Bay. Although the structure has been open less than a year, it’s already reducing pedestrian-bicycle-vehicle crashes in this corridor. The Florida Department of Transportation has developed a Pedestrian Safety Action Plan, which includes a commitment to reducing pedestrian fatalities by 20% in 2015. The new trail bridge is a component of that plan. with direct dialogue between Ayres and FDOT. On the construction side, scheduling of activities had to account for a variety of constraints, such as high tide, nesting seasons, the Republican National Convention, and the havoc created by Tropical Storm Andrea. “When you have a tropical storm come through, two things happen – the wind blows, and the tide goes up,” Norton said, explaining how floating equipment like barges and cranes had to be moved into shallower water or a protected harbor, and any water-sensitive materials on land had to be taken to higher ground or removed all together. “So any time there was a storm coming, we had to stop everything we were doing and relocate pieces of equipment. It takes time to prepare, and then it takes time to undo everything and get back to work.”