September/October
2001
Colossal
Partnership: Denver's $1.67 Billion T-REX Project
by Steve Moler
Metro
Denver's Transportation Expansion Project (T-REX), a $1.67 billion
combined freeway reconstruction and light-rail extension, is as massive
as the name implies, and three years ago, it was nothing more than
a dream.
It existed only in concept and proposal — and in commuters' wildest
imaginations— but in an astonishing blitz from March 1998 to
May 2001, T-REX, now one of the largest transportation projects in
the United States, won all environmental approvals, received full
funding, and secured a contractor who agreed to finish the project
two years earlier than planned and $39 million under budget.
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How could a project of this magnitude — reconstructing 17 miles
(27 kilometers) of Denver's outmoded Interstate 25 and Interstate 225
freeways and extending the city's light-rail system an impressive 19
miles (almost 31 kilometers) — accomplish so much in such a relatively
short period of time? In an industry in which both modes have historically
traveled down separate and sometimes competing tracks, the answer might
surprise you — collaboration.
"The sense of cooperation between highway and transit has been
the backbone of this project," said Bill Jones, the Federal Highway
Administration's Colorado Division administrator. "When the two
modes first came together in this project, we realized one could not
be done without the other. In my 30-plus years of experience, I have
never seen any project with such high levels of cooperation."
A
Unique Project
From the moment the project was conceived in the mid-1990s, four transportation
agencies — the Federal Highway Administration (FHWA), Federal
Transit Administration (FTA), Colorado Department of Transportation
(CDOT), and Denver's Regional Transportation District (RTD) —
have managed to set aside personal egos and agency turf wars to work
like a team of synchronized swimmers in bringing the project to fruition.
T-REX, which until May 2001 was called the Southeast Corridor Project,
involves the simultaneous rehabilitation of I-25 and I-225 and construction
of the light-rail extension and its 13 stations — all in one
massive design-build contract.
The freeway component involves adding one additional lane in each
direction along most portions of the project (two lanes in each direction
in the more congested areas), eight interchange reconstructions, the
complete reconstruction of the I-25/I-225 interchange, replacement
or rehabilitation of 18 bridges, complete reconstruction of the "Narrows"
section of I-25 between Broadway and Steele streets, shoulder widening,
and major improvements in drainage.
One light-rail line will extend about 15 miles (24 kilometers) along
the west side of I-25 from the existing Broadway station south to
Lincoln Avenue just inside neighboring Douglas County. A second line
will stretch east about 4 miles (6.5 kilometers) down the median of
I-225 to Parker Road in the city of Aurora.
Constructing the highway and light-rail components simultaneously
provides several advantages. It saves taxpayers an estimated $300
million to $500 million in construction costs, and it minimizes public
inconvenience, which is one of the project's highest priorities. RTD
Director Cal Marsella explained the logic: "The alternative can
be compared to building a storm drain down your street, then seeing
the contractor come back a year later and dig up the street again
to build the sewer. It wouldn't make a lot of sense. Let's do T-REX
one time and minimize the disruption."
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| Project
map showing locations of light-rail stations. |
|
Freeway
and light-rail projects have been built together before, but not on
the scale of T-REX.
"This project is unique in that it's the only project of its
size where you find highway and transit working together on a single
project," Jones said. "This is the ultimate ONE DOT project."
(ONE DOT is a management strategy that builds on the strength of mutual
collaboration between the agencies of the U.S. Department of Transportation
to reduce duplication and save resources. See "We Are ONE DOT!"
by Melissa J. Allen in the January/February 1999 issue of Public
Roads.)
In the project's early stages, when CDOT Executive Director Tom Norton
told transportation officials around the country that Denver planned
to construct a combined highway and light-rail project along the same
right of way, they responded mostly with skepticism.
"At first, we didn't get much encouragement from the industry,"
Norton said. "No one thought we could do this. Now, I hear people
saying, 'Wow, how did you do it?'"
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| Rendering
of the Colorado (light rail) station. |
|
How
It All Began
T-REX's initial footsteps can be traced back to a 1992 congestion
study commissioned by the Denver Regional Council of Governments (DRCOG).
The study found that traffic volume along the corridor had exceeded
its maximum capacity of 180,000 vehicles per day and, within a few
years, the freeway would be near gridlock most of the day. Adding
to the gloomy forecast of gridlock, planners projected that 150,000
new jobs would be added in the downtown area and at the huge Denver
Tech Center, which is 15 miles (24 kilometers) to the south, over
the next 20 years. The study not only recommended widening the freeway
by several lanes, but it also suggested incorporating some type of
mass transit into any future improvements.
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| The
interchange of I-25 and I-225, which is the 14th most congested
interchange in the nation, will be completed redesigned
and reconstructed. |
|
The
study's recommendations, however, presented several difficult, if
not nearly insurmountable, challenges. First, purchasing the required
land along the highly urbanized corridor to add freeway lanes would
be extremely expensive. Also, adding lanes would require replacing,
expanding, or repairing up to 20 bridges, and the I-25/I-225 interchange,
the 14th most congested interchange in the United States, would have
to be completely reconstructed. The corridor's route through several
municipalities would likely complicate planning and decision-making,
and no one knew for sure if the public would embrace mass transit.
Furthermore, who would have jurisdiction over construction and management
of any future improvement project — CDOT or RTD or some other
entity?
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T-REX History
April 1995 — Southeast Corridor Major Investment Study
(MIS) begins. Recommends 19-mile (31-kilometer), 13-station
light-rail extension and major safety improvements (but no additional
lanes) to I-25/I-225.
October
1997— Denver Regional Council of Governments adopts
MIS.
March
1998 — Public meetings begin for project's environmental
impact statement (EIS).
November
1999 — Voters approve two bond measures that pave the
way for project financing.
December
1999 — Final EIS signed.
March
2000 — Record of decision issued.
July
2000 —T-REX begins qualifying contractors for bidding.
November
2000 —FTA awards $525 million full-funding agreement.
Request for proposal released to qualified bidders.
May
2001 — Southeast Corridor Project renamed Transportation
Expansion Project (T-REX). Southeast Corridor Constructors,
a Kiewit-Parsons team, selected to build the project.
June
2001 — Contract awarded; notice to proceed issued.
Sept.
24, 2001 — Groundbreaking.
October
2001 — Construction begins.
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In April 1995, CDOT and RTD took the first step toward developing
the partnership that ultimately became T-REX. The two agencies and
DRCOG commissioned the Southeast Corridor Major Investment Study (MIS),
which sought the best solutions to the I-25/I-225 congestion problem.
Arapahoe and Douglas counties and the cities of Denver, Aurora, and
Greenwood Village also participated in the MIS. Two other Denver-area
corridor studies were also undertaken.
Two years later, DRCOG adopted the MIS recommendations, which included
the 19 miles of double-track light rail and 13 stations with the track
running next to or in the median of I-25 and I-225. On the highway
side, while the report recommended major safety improvements such
as acceleration and deceleration lanes and wider shoulders, it did
not call for additional lanes. FHWA and CDOT were troubled by the
omission, and leaders of all four agencies agreed that the MIS placed
too much emphasis on transit.
"We weren't going to spend over a billion dollars on this project
without involving more highway capacity. It couldn't be a predominantly
transit project," Jones said. "This was the turning point
when we realized together that the transit part of the project couldn't
be built without the highway part."
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| Rendering of the Lincoln (light rail) Station. |
|
A
Team Is Born
After the adoption of the MIS, all four agencies in June 1998 signed
a "partnering charter" that created a leadership team to
identify and pursue the best multimodal solutions. Then 16 months
later, they signed a "partnering agreement" that established
four goals:
Minimize inconvenience to the community, motorists, and public.
Meet or beat the total program budget of $1.67 billion.
Provide a quality project.
Meet or beat the project's operational deadline of June 30, 2008.
In November
1998, DRCOG adopted Metro Vision 2020, the Denver area's 20-year regional
transportation plan. T-REX was a top priority in the plan.
"We looked at ways to break down the highway vs. transit rivalry
and started looking at mobility," Marsella said. "Let's
look at highway and transit as coordinated pieces of a comprehensive
strategy to maximize mobility in a project with limited available
right of way. We set our sights on a project that was a win-win [proposition]
for both transit and highway. What emerged was the T-REX project."
CDOT and RTD next assembled a project team that was housed in one
location. At the same time, top management from all four agencies
began meeting every two weeks. The purpose of the senior-level meetings
was "not just to get briefings," said Chick Dolby, Federal
Transit Administration deputy regional administrator, "but to
do the planning and make decisions."
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| This
shows an existing section of I-25 at "The Narrows"
in the upper left and a depiction of the same section at
the completion of the project. The light-rail line runs
adjacent to or west of the freeway as shown at the far right
side of the main image. |
|
CDOT and RTD then signed an intergovernmental agreement that established
a cooperative framework to finance, design, and construct T-REX. CDOT
hired the consultant Carter & Burgess to begin work on the environmental
impact statement (EIS). Meanwhile, FHWA and FTA signed a memorandum
of agreement that created a single ONE DOT management team.
Colorado law provided another challenge. CDOT could legally pursue only
a low-bid contract for T-REX. So Norton, working closely with Colorado
Gov. Bill Owens, got the state legislature to enact a law permitting
a design-build contract. The governor also worked with the legislature
to place two bond measures on the November 1999 ballot: a local initiative
to allow RTD to sell bonds for the light rail, and a statewide initiative
to allow CDOT to sell bonds to help finance the highway portion of T-REX
and several other state highway projects.
New
Transportation Approach?
Many major metropolitan areas, Marsella pointed out, have grown to
where their freeway systems, originally built 40 to 50 years ago,
are in desperate need of expansion and reconstruction. The time is
right, he said, to reconstruct freeways in conjunction with light
rail to increase capacity and optimize existing, and often limited,
rights of way.
"It's the way of the future," Dolby agreed. "How are
you going to move people and goods through these corridors? To the
extent possible, you've got to have highway-transit partnerships.
There's got to be a balance."
The highway-transit solution certainly resonated with Colorado voters.
In November 1999, voters gave their full support for the project by
overwhelmingly approving the two bond measures.
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| Interchanges
such as this one at I-25 at Colorado Boulevard will completed
reconstructed. |
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T-REX
Gains Momentum
Over the next 11 months, an unprecedented sequence of events took
place. First, in December 1999, less than a year after the first EIS
public meetings were held, the final environmental impact statement
(FEIS) was released, and it listed the preferred alternative as the
19-mile, 13-station light-rail extension with major improvements to
I-25/I-225, including additional lanes, wider shoulders, upgraded
ramps, and a complete redesign and reconstruction of the I-25/I-225
interchange. Some 18 existing bridges would also be either completely
rebuilt or rehabilitated.
Several other project components, according to the FEIS, would be
acquired or completed outside the design-build contract: a $40 million
light-rail maintenance facility, which includes design, construction,
and yard track work; a $17 million parking garage and other improvements
at the new Nine-Mile (light-rail) Station; $20 million worth of early
utility relocation; $107 million for acquisition of right of way;
and about $100 million for 34 new light-rail vehicles and for transit
fare machines.
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| Rendering
of the Nine-Mile (light-rail) Station. |
|
Three
months later, on March 17, 2000, the project's record of decision
was issued. To many people's amazement, the entire environmental review
process took just 18 months to complete.
But this unheard of accomplishment didn't surprise Dolby.
"Other projects I've worked on haven't had this level of partnering.
Everyone on T-REX agreed to bury the hatchet and set aside our differences.
It's almost as if everyone agreed we weren't going to bring baggage
to the table. We all work for T-REX," he said.
Help
From the Feds
While all that was going on, T-REX officials, with bonding authority
in hand and consensus on just about all aspects of the project, traveled
to Washington, D.C., in early 2000 to seek federal funding. This is
where FHWA and FTA played critical roles, Marsella said.
"Both agencies did all of our downfield blocking for us in Washington.
We were all on the same page; we were all moving in the same direction,"
he said.
By November 2000, FHWA had committed nearly $400 million to the highway
portion of the project, and FTA approved a $525 million full-funding
agreement for the light rail. Several municipalities within the corridor
also committed about $30 million in matching funds. That month, T-REX
also released draft requests for proposals to three "short-listed"
bidders. T-REX was now indeed on an unstoppable roll.
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| An
existing section of I-225 is shown in the insert at upper
left, and the main image depicts the proposed freeway improvements
and the light-rail line in the median of the freeway. |
|
Moving
Into Construction
As T-REX officials prepared to select the design-build contractor
and move into construction, the project's name was changed from the
Southeast Corridor Project to T-REX. The previous name, according
to research, held little meaning to the public, and most Denver area
residents didn't even know where the Southeast Corridor was located.
"This is a big project. It deserves a big name," Marsella
said in a May 17, 2001, press release announcing the name change.
"What better way to overhaul the metro area's transportation
landscape than with the force of T-REX, the king of all transportation
projects."
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Highway Elements of T-REX Project
One additional lane in each direction on most sections; two
additional lanes in most congested areas.
Eight interchange reconstructions.
Complete reconstruction of the I-25/I-225 interchange.
Complete reconstruction of "Narrows" (Broadway
to Steele streets).
Replacement or rehabilitation of 18 bridges.
Acceleration and deceleration lanes throughout.
Shoulders widened where feasible.
Traffic demand management (TDM) and intelligent transportation
systems (ITS).
Major drainage upgrades.
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After
a fiercely competitive bidding process, T-REX selected its final team
member on May 22, 2001. Southeast Corridor Constructors, a group led
by Kiewit Construction Co. and Parsons Transportation Group, was chosen
as the project's design-build contractor through a best-value process
in which CDOT and RTD equally evaluated and weighed technical and
price aspects.
The contractor impressed project officials with its success in similar
projects. For example, the Kiewit-Parsons team recently completed
the 17-mile (27-kilometer), $1.3 billion I-15 reconstruction in Salt
Lake City on budget and well in advance of the 2002 Winter Olympics.
The group also worked on several other high-profile transportation
projects, including Colorado's I-70 Glenwood Canyon project; San Joaquin
Hills Transportation Corridor in Orange County, Calif.; the Charles
River Crossing in Boston, Mass.; and light-rail projects in Salt Lake
City, Denver, and Washington, D.C.
The team sugar-frosted its winning proposal by agreeing to finish
the project by September 2006 — 22 months ahead of schedule —
and $39 million under the $1.23 billion price. The competitors couldn't
match this bid.
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| An
aerial view of the I-25 corridor in the area of University
Boulevard. |
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With
many of the initial project hurdles cleared, T-REX has now shifted
its focus to construction, which begins in October 2001, and to the
implementation of an innovative and aggressive traffic management
plan. To meet the goal to minimize public inconvenience, some $3 million
has been committed to subsidize van and car pools, to educate the
public, and to encourage employers to permit telecommuting and flexible
work hours. A massive public information program, using the Internet,
the news media, and public meetings, keeps commuters informed about
traffic conditions, construction schedules, and ways to cope with
the construction.
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Light-Rail Elements of T-REX Project
19 miles (31 kilometers) of double-track line.
13 new stations.
No at-grade crossings.
34 additional light-rail vehicles.
New maintenance facility.
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For
its part, the contractor won't close any lanes throughout the corridor
during rush hours. In fact, the contractor has taken matters a step
further by proposing to increase the freeway's capacity during construction
via a temporary 4th high-occupancy-vehicle (HOV) or general-purpose
lane.
"This was a very attractive part of the contractor's winning
proposal — to actually increase capacity during construction,"
said T-REX Project Manager Larry Warner.
As the project shifts gears over the next several months, the question
arises: What does T-REX mean for the nation's transportation future?
"I think we're going to be looking at mobility from more than
one perspective," Jones said. "T-REX has given us a greater
appreciation of what can be done jointly. It has taught us that strong
highway-transit relationships are entirely possible."
Steve
Moler is the public affairs specialist at FHWA's Western Resource
Center in San Francisco, Calif.
You
can obtain additional information about the T-REX project on the Internet
at www.trexproject.com.
Other
Articles in this Issue:
Low-Altitude
Laser Surveys Provide Flexibility and Savings
The
Marriage of Safety and Land-Use Planning: A Fresh Look at Local Roadways
Strengthening
the Connection Between Transportation and Land Use
Iron
and Asphalt: The Evolution of the Spiral Curve in Railroads and Parkways
New
Life for Old Transmitters: Converting GWEN to NDGPS
Colossal
Partnership: Denver's $1.67 Billion T-REX Project
One-of-a-Kind
Bridge Project Protects National Bird
Partnership
Protects Pristine Estuary and Wetlands
Relationship
Marketing: A Key to Success and Survival