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By Greg Udelhofen
Editor
Expansion of the Florida Turnpike in Palm Beach County, FL has reached the midpoint, with Ranger Construction maintaining an aggressive pace to complete the $31 million seven-mile widening project by March 2007. The project includes adding north and southbound travel lanes, reconstructing two bridges and constructing a new shoulder lane that can be converted into a travel lane as future demand requires.
One of Florida's leading heavy/highway contractors, Ranger Construction was awarded the contract to widen seven miles of SR-91 (Florida Turnpike) from Atlantic Avenue to the Lantana Toll Plaza in 2004. The project involves widening the roadway from four to six lanes, milling and resurfacing existing lanes, bridge reconstruction, sound barrier wall construction, drainage, lighting and landscaping. The contract includes up to $1 million in incentives if Ranger finishes work ahead of the 990-day production schedule. Ranger is a major road building, site work, asphalt and excavation contractor serving southeast, central and northeast areas of Florida.
Project on schedule
Juan Hernandez says the project, which began October 2004 is on schedule, with Ranger receiving a $450,000 early completion incentive for meeting the first deadline (covering the southern portion of the project) established by the Florida Department of Transportation. Completion incentives/disincentives assess a daily amount of $6,000 for the southern phase of the project and a daily amount of $3,665 for the entire 990-day completion deadline. Work on the project includes adding a travel lane to the existing two travel lanes of both the north and southbound sections of the turnpike, as well as constructing a full-depth outer shoulder to accommodate future travel lane needs. The expansion also includes milling the existing travel lanes to correct cross slope of the expanded highway and repaving those lanes. Hernandez estimates that over 320,000 yards of old asphalt will be milled from the existing travel lanes, shoulders and on/off ramps during the project.
"We had to trench out the (additional) third lane and shoulder to subgrade and then build those two lanes up to the existing travel lanes," Hernandez says.
Hernandez expects to complete work on the project by the March 2007 deadline and collect another $550,000 incentive by beating the 990-day project schedule. There are additional incentives Ranger can achieve for density and value-added pavement specifications. While there have been some changes during the first phase of the project, the only significant anticipated overrun on the original $31.3 million contract is an FDOT-approved design change to add guardrails to sections of the roadway that didn't already have the safety structures, which will add approximately $200,000 for 9,000 feet of installed guardrail.