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Moving forward
Asphalt sections of U. S.
171 push south
By Sam Barnes
The four-laning of U. S. Highway 171 continues in Beauregard
Parish, as R. E. Heidt Construction Co. of Westlake builds
new lanes and rebuilds old ones between Gillis and Ragley.
The mostly rural, $17 million road section will link to a
new U. S. Highway 190 overpass under construction in Ragley.
Brent Arabie, R. E. Heidt project manager, said the Transportation
Infrastructure Model for Economic Development project is a
little different from other jobs on the heavily traveled road.
"DOTD has broken the project into 16 zones and schedules
each phase that way," Arabie said. "One zone might
have more excavation here and another zone might need a little
more embankment. It makes it easier to manage the project.
"It also helps us better manage material orders. We
can break our quantities down a little better, which helps
a lot with scheduling deliveries."
The road has an atypical shoulder underdrain system consisting
of a 7-in.-thick layer of limestone wrapped in a filter fabric.
The limestone will allow water to drain from beneath the road.
"The road has a 10-in.-thick limestone base, and when
there's that much stone beneath an asphalt highway there has
to be a way for the water to drain," Arabie said. "Water
will seep beneath the asphalt and be trapped unless there's
a way out."
Cypress General Contractors of Westlake is placing the limestone,
as well as building the embankment for the project.
"Distributing the limestone for the shoulder base has
been tedious because the rock doesn't compact real good,"
said Cypress President Gavin Abshire. "We're using steel
forms to slipform the rock to keep it in place."
Two in. of wearing-course asphalt will be placed on top of
the shoulder limestone.
Work began at the site in August when a Cypress crew began
building the road embankment for the new northbound lanes.
Traffic will be switched to the new lanes in December and
R. E. Heidt will then mill and overlay the existing two-lane
road to serve as the southbound lanes.
Arabie said Cypress has performed virtually all of the work
at the site so far.
"They've done everything there is to see out there,"
he added. "They've even performed most of the scheduling.
Our main scope of work is the asphalt part of it, but I'm
out there every day to assist them."
Abshire said that the numerous creeks crisscrossing the jobsite
slowed the embankment construction somewhat. In each location,
reinforced concrete pipes and 7- by 7-ft. and 8- by 8-ft.
precast box culverts are placed for drainage, but no bridges
are being built.
"There's also a lot of fill in those low areas to build
up the road bed," Abshire added. About 189,000 cu. yds.
of fill are being placed for the embankment, 186,000 cu. yds.
of which comes from on-site excavation. The remaining dirt
comes from off-site borrow pits.
After the fill is in place and compacted, the Cypress crew
is "cutting" soil cement to stabilize the soil and
placing 10 in. of limestone. Dunham-Price Inc. of Westlake
is supplying more than 63,000 tons of limestone to the job.
R. E. Heidt began placing asphalt on the new lanes in June.
"There'll be 9 in. of asphalt, consisting of 4 in. of
base, 3 in. of binder and 2 in. of wearing course," Arabie
said. An R. E. Heidt plant in Westlake will supply more than
119,000 tons of asphalt to the site.
Each day, about 20 trucks will deliver asphalt to a Roadtech
paving machine and material transfer vehicle during the paving
of two 12-ft. driving lanes, a 10-ft. outside shoulder and
a 4-ft. inside shoulder.
Crews will pave from south to north.
"We'll just put the base and binder down before switching
traffic over late this year," Arabie said. "Then
we'll come back and put the final 2 in. of wearing just prior
to project completion."
When traffic is switched over to the new lanes Midwest Milling
of Gainesville, Texas, will mill 2 in. from the existing two-lane
road and R. E. Heidt will follow with 2 in. of Superpave-design
asphalt.
The process should take about 60 days, with some pavement
cutting necessary to install underdrains beneath the existing
road.
"There are 11 crossovers and turning lanes to build
into the existing lanes and that will take some additional
time," Arabie said. "We expect to have everything
done by June."
R. E. Heidt Construction is also four-laning a 6-mi., $10.5
million stretch of U.S. 171 to the north.
Occie Norton, a project manager with R. E. Heidt, said asphalt
was chosen over concrete for the "A+B+C" project.
The project stretches from Ragley to Longville and will be
completed later this year.
A+B+C bidding puts asphalt and concrete producers and contractors
on a level playing field.
The "A" part of the equation is the estimated cost
of construction and "B" the time factor of the project.
The "C" portion represents the merger of two ideas
- the alternate design/alternate bid process and a lifecycle
cost analysis.
The state factors into the bids estimates of lifecycle costs,
including maintenance and user delays, based on a 30- or 40-year
analysis period.
The Ragley-to-Longville project calls for construction of
two new lanes, re-routing of existing utilities and installation
of concrete drainage catch basins and piping.
"That work is pretty far along," Norton said. "All
of the binder is down and we're waiting to complete the underground
drainage. Then we'll put the shoulder in and switch traffic.
We expect to finish the project in November."
An $8.4 million overpass being built at U.S. 171 and U.S.
190 separates the two projects. F. Miller & Sons Construction
of Lake Charles will complete the overpass next year.
Useful Resource:
For updates on the progress of the U. S. 171 projects in
Beauregard Parish, go to: http://www.dotd.state.la.us/construction/charles.html#BEAUREGARD
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