Posted on 01/04/2019 10:57:54 PM PST by Tolerance Sucks Rocks
With more than a year left before construction starts, the Alabama Department of Transportation (ALDOT) has begun demolition work for the proposed Mobile River bridge and Bayway project.
The agency is currently in the process of tearing down nine buildings throughout the project site just south of downtown near Virginia Street, where the bridge will be footed.
Because the final design is in a preliminary phase, we dont have exact locations on where the footings are going to be , ALDOT spokeswoman Allison Gregg said.
Some of the buildings were vacant before ALDOT acquired them, other owners and tenants were asked to move. Gregg said the acquisition process can be quite lengthy, but owners were offered fair market value for their property.
Attorney Jason Darley moved his offices out of one of those buildings in April. He has since relocated to North Lawrence Street.
Darley recalled the process began about six to eight months before he actually moved. He said right-of-way specialists came and offered a timeline for the project. It was fairly accurate, Darley said.
I was pretty happy with the process, but Im not an owner, he said. I talked with people who planned the project and they told me it was a when not an if. I was surprised when they said it was really happening.
He said he misses the old building.
There is some sentimental value in it, of course, Darley said. It was a beautiful building and I enjoyed being there.
Following the demolition of each building, a team of archeologists examine the sites to look for any historically significant deposits. Its a crucial step before ALDOT can continue the project, Gregg said.
Theres already been a lot of archeological work, Gregg said. Theyre removing the buildings so they can take a look at whats underneath. This is part of all federally funded projects you have to do.
Philip Carr, Ph.D., director of the Center for Archeological Studies at the University of South Alabama, said the team has already recovered artifacts from prehistoric and colonial settlements from the site, as well as some from the 1800s and beyond.
Some of the so-called deposits are still intact and more intense excavation work is set to begin in March. Carr said the work of archeologists will not interrupt the project, as they are to keep a tight schedule.
Well be finished by the time construction starts, Carr said. We have enough people power to make sure we stick to the schedule thats already there. Weve been given 12 to 18 months.
Carr said theyve already found prehistoric Native American shell mounds, pottery and animal bones. From the 19th century, theyve found household items and ceramics, he said.
Construction is still set to begin in 2020, Gregg said, with ALDOT contemplating hiring one of three development teams. The chosen team will be responsible for design and construction of the new bridge as well as a wider and taller span to replace the existing Bayway, she said.
Proposals from the design teams are due in June.
While those design teams will be required to sink private money into a portion of the project, Gregg said, the plan is to reimburse them through tolling. As it stands, tolls will be placed on the new bridge, bayway and the Wallace Tunnel. The tolls will be segmented, Gregg said, meaning drivers will only pay a toll equal to the portion they travel.
In addition to private money, the bridge will also be funded through federal grants and other public money.
Gregg reiterated the importance of the project for the future of transportation on the Gulf Coast.
Weve got to get this started now because our traffic projections show that if we dont do anything within 20 years, the traffic like we see on the Fourth of July will be like that every day, she said.
The timetable for construction is about five years, Gregg said. ALDOT is looking at a 2025 completion date. When completed, the bridge should be one of the highest suspension bridges in the country. In fact, it should only be about six feet shorter than the Golden Gate Bridge.
PING.
ping
I remember back in the 70’s when they were stretching I10 through Texas. Drilling the holes in the nearby hills to drop dynamite... Then.. BOOM... blew most of our house’s windows out with the blast-waves :p (was about 20 or so houses in that area)..
Is anyone really going to search keywords: artifacts, design, i10...
Oh, no! Not another paleo-Outhouse!!!/sarc.
I used to do archaeological work in the US and Tikal, Guatemala. In the jungle, nobody cares about where you take a dump!
Come to think of it, in San Francisco, nobody cares about where someone takes a dump! My what a coincidence, and you remember what happened to the Mayan civilization. If only ....
Thanks SteveH.
How can auto traffic be projected to increase when AOC says fossil fuel will be eliminated in a few years?
They will all be these little beanie weenie electric cars.
And God forbid they find anything related to the ol’ CSA.
Fortunately (?) in the US, they do. I remember looking at a plat for a house construction in Grand Rapids Michigan from about 1900. Carefully located on the plat was the outhouse. I'm sure archeologists would love to have this now. They would know exactly where to look.
Will we still have the freedom of movement in a few years?
Magic cars.
Mega mass conveyor belt systems instead of roafs.
“fifthamendment” seems an odd choice too.
There were never any outhouses. All structures were religious or sacrificial structures.
I remember a Readers’ Digest story many years ago about a religious site with skeletal remains in a bed and facing an object across the room. End of the story was it was really a guy in a hotel room watching tv.
Same as today, everyone killed by US troops in the ME is always some head honcho. There’s never any average guy killed.
Auto traffic would greatly reduce and there wouldn’t be any need for the new highway if we’d deport all the illegals.
Looking for beer cans or bottles?
US Route 90 parallels this bridge. Wonder if any of the bright folks have considered incorporating US 90 into the new I10 bridge? The construction cost of this one bridge would prolly be less then constructing two bridges.
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