Trends Winter 2018 | Page 10

CARSON PARK FACTS • Donated to city in 1914 by heirs to lumber baron William Carson • 134-acre peninsula nearly surrounded by Half Moon Lake • Carson Park baseball stadium was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 2003 • Major league baseball greats such as Hank Aaron, Joe Torre, and Bob Uecker have all played in Carson Park • Home to both the Paul Bunyan Logging Camp Museum and the Chippewa Valley Museum • One-half mile rideable miniature railway operates in the park Sources: cvmuseum.com, visiteauclaire.com Dan Sydow was an excellent project manager and kept things moving on the Ayres side. We knew this was going to be a rather complex process for the permitting and getting all the approvals – that was known from the get-go and expressed from Day One – and Dan, in a very business-like manner, just kept the ball rolling in a very steady, deliberate, and straightforward manner. - Dave Solberg, City Engineer, City of Eau Claire 10│ TRENDS “They wanted us to put in some tree drops – basically dead trees. The idea was to anchor them into the embankment and submerge them in the water just below the surface so that fish can come up and hide in there,” Sydow said. “That makes good fish habitat.” Poor water quality in the lake was another challenge to address. Both sides of the lake had issues, but one was worse than the other. Ayres recommended increasing the bridge opening and adding extra culvert pipes to facilitate a greater exchange of water flow between the two areas. Before the bridge closed for construction, additional measures were taken to keep the public informed and minimize impacts to some of the disadvantaged populations living nearby. A tri-lingual project website and flyer was developed in Hmong, English, and Spanish as part of this process, something not standardly done for DOT projects but important for this project to make sure those used to accessing Carson Park at this entrance were fully aware of what was going to happen, when the bridge closure would occur, and how long it would last. Placing fill in the lake to widen the causeway was no small undertaking either. Nearly 11,000 cubic yards of soft and contaminated lakebed sediment – up to 9 feet thick in places – was removed and replaced with more than 30,000 cubic yards of new material. “That was probably one of the bigger engineering challenges – calculating how much we needed to take out of there, figuring out what kind of material should go in, and then working with the regulators to determine what to do with the disposal material,” Sydow said, noting that the City was a partner in that effort, creating a disposal spot at its wastewater treatment plant, which saved time and money. Taking the material to a landfill would’ve been much more costly. Of all the project complexities involved in the project, the biggest from an environmental permitting perspective was the issue of disposing the contaminated lake sediment for the widening of the causeway, Willger said. “It took a lot of coordination between all parties involved, but, in the end, the project was completed in an environmentally sound way that met all the relevant state standards,” he said. “The partnerships between the consultants, the City of Eau Claire, WisDOT, the contractor, and the Wisconsin DNR was exceptional, and everyone stepped up to do the right thing and create the best possible project.” Ultimately, designers were able to more than triple the footprint of the causeway – making room for bike