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Winds of Change
Future of Lubbock's Economy, Transportation
Riding on Bigger, Better Roads
By Eileen Schwartz
In the wind-whipped plains of the Texas
Panhandle, a place most non-Texans imagine as a flatland of
rolling tumbleweeds, a $295 million highway is progressing
in the city of Lubbock, population 202,000, designed to keep
up with the city's economic, educational and cultural growth.
With the development of the new Marsha
Sharp Freeway, the Texas Department of Transportation is mapping
out more efficient movement of traffic and faster access to
Lubbock's points of interest.
In recent years the city has witnessed
growth such as development and preservation efforts in the
central business district, the building boom at Texas Tech
University and the opening of the Buddy Holly Center in the
renovated Fort Worth & Denver Depot building, which draws
thousands of visitors to the hometown of the legendary rocker
for programs centered around music and visual arts.
According to TxDOT, the 13-mi. highway job is expected to
generate $945 million in economic output with an estimated
$755 million remaining in the Lubbock region. The department
also expects the creation of nearly 10,000 statewide jobs,
some 8,000 of which will remain in the Lubbock area.
In May 2003 Granite Construction Co. of Watsonville, Calif.,
began the approximately $50 million first phase of the east-west
freeway corridor dubbed the Marsha Sharp Freeway in honor
of the Texas Tech University's Lady Raiders' coach who led
the women's basketball team to a national championship in
1993. The completed project will eventually convert U.S. Highway
82 from a principal arterial highway to a controlled-access
concrete freeway consisting of four lanes of travel from West
Loop 289 to the Interstate 27 interchange.
In December the $120 million contract for the second phase
of the freeway will be let, and construction is scheduled
to begin in the spring. The third project, estimated to cost
$65 million, is scheduled to let in 2009, and the fourth and
final phase is the construction of the Interstate 27 interchange,
estimated at $60 million and projected to let after 2010.
Tom Jones, project manager for Granite, said the first phase
is about 60 percent complete with contractual completion slated
for November 2005. Construction acceleration incentives are
built into the contract with TxDOT.
"We plan to continue maximizing production operations
this summer and minimizing rework," Jones said. "A
mild winter would be very beneficial for the project schedule."
Ron Baker, TxDOT Lubbock Urban area engineer, said the project
is 125 days ahead of schedule and should be finished in July.
He attributes the quickness, in part, to creative solutions
to traffic control.
"The traffic-control plan has really helped with the
acceleration," Baker said. "We had more than 40,000
cars a day that we had to set down on the frontage road. So
we did away with all of the traffic signals and put in two
big turnarounds."
Traffic was able to exit but didn't have to stop at any signs
or signals, and it could then re-enter. "This allowed
us to do all the main lanes at the same time under no traffic,"
he said.
Hauling all of the dirt at night was a safety issue combined
with productivity, Baker added. "We didn't have to deal
with daily traffic congestion."
Jones said the goal of the first phase is to rebuild and
widen existing facilities in order to accommodate anticipated
future traffic volumes. The project represents the western
end of the freeway and includes rebuilding 2.5 mi. of the
U.S. 62/U.S. 82 interchange and 2.6 mi. of West Loop 289.
"From the beginning of the project, our focus was completing
the new northbound and southbound frontage roads of Loop 289
so the mainline traffic could be diverted," Jones said.
After that occurred in May, the existing mainline bridge structures
were removed, and new bridge construction began in June.
The job is not the first in the Panhandle area for the company.
Granite was the original contractor for most of Loop 289 and
completed a substantial amount of the $180 million Interstate
27 between Lubbock and Amarillo constructed between 1985 and
1992. The project does mark the first time TxDOT is allowing
reclaimed asphalt paving as mechanically stabilized earth
retaining-wall backfill. "All of the structural concrete
is being measured for in-place strength with maturity meters,"
Jones said. "That saves the time and effort involved
with destructive cylinder testing procedures for seven-day
and 28-day concrete strengths."
That'll be the Day
The concept of an east-west access for
the city of Lubbock goes back to 1964 with the publication
of the Lubbock Urban Transportation Plan, a document addressing
future traffic growth. A second volume was published a few
years later, ideas were tossed around, and plans were developed,
changed and redeveloped. The turning point was a public hearing
in 1993 that drew some 1,000 participants. It then took the
state four years to complete the three-volume 1,100-page environmental
document that was approved in 1995.
In 1997 TxDOT hired Dallas-based HNTB
Cos. and Houston-based Dannenbaum Engineering Corp. to develop
design plans for the freeway.
And nearly four decades after its conception,
roadwork is finally under way.
Milestones leading up to the groundbreaking
included a $7 million storm sewer project completed in 1997
and the purchase of Texas Tech property by TxDOT in 2002 for
$12.4 million, the largest acquisition in the history of the
Lubbock district.
TxDOT had several meetings with representatives
from the university to ensure that the Texas Tech Master Plan
is consistent with the design of the Marsha Sharp Freeway.
The new Texas Tech Parkway and the Ninth Street Bridge that
are incorporated into the freeway design will ultimately serve
as vital links to the Texas Tech campus.
"Texas Tech is on both sides of
U.S. 82," Baker said. "So we did purchase a lot
of land from the university to build the freeway. At the same
time, we are providing pedestrian overpasses. It would be
hard to cross without them. What was once a beaten path for
students will now be replaced with pedestrian bridges."
Bridge bents planned for the Texas Tech
portion will feature a Spanish colonial design to match the
university's buildings.
An additional design feature is the "Windy
Man" icon, originally planned for about 24 placements
throughout the project. But after the first image was put
in place and subsequently defaced, plans have changed.
"We think we can put up about 10
where they can't be easily accessed," Baker said, adding
that the placement would likely be on 12-ft.-high retaining
walls at select locations along the freeway.
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