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I-10/I-610 Interchange
Contractor: Boh Bros. Construction, New Orleans
Location: New Orleans
Cost: $28.8 million
Project manager: Al Flettrich & Ed Foss
Jobsite superintendent: Nelson Ardoin
Engineer: Louisiana Department of Transportation and
Development, Baton Rouge
The I-10/I-610 "split" is Louisiana's most heavily
traveled roadway, with more than 160,000 cars making the five-mile
drive from downtown New Orleans to Metairie every day. The
bottleneck caused by the merger of the two interstates made
this brief journey a 40-minute commute at rush hour.
Boh Bros. began this five-phase project in January 1998 with
the widening of I-610 eastbound and the construction of a
massive new bridge at the 17th Street Canal. Phases Two and
Three involved widening I-10 westbound, including completion
of the bridge work, as well as widening of westbound I-610.
The completion of eastbound interstate widening was included
in Phase Four, while Phase Five included the finishing touches
- milling and overlay of asphalt, re-striping, canal dredging,
demolition and cleanup.
Bridgework was a critical part of each of the four phases
of the project. Because of the importance of the interstates
as an evacuation route, engineers designed the new canal crossings
to withstand hurricanes and flood waters up to the top of
the barrier rail. To make the bridges waterproof, the deck
and guardrails were poured in a single seamless unit so that
traffic could continue to flow even if water were as high
as the barrier rail.
The largest pour, in Phase Four, was poured in January 2000
and was so large that it required concrete supplier Carlo
Ditta's entire fleet of 38 trucks and all three of its state-approved
concrete plants.
Boh personnel closed eastbound I-610 in order to keep the
concrete coming, as the crews needed it. As it turned out,
that particular night was the coldest night of the year and
project personnel watched the weather closely to ensure the
integrity of the pour.
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