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Archives for June 2024

Paving for Planes: Michels’ Dane County airport job comes with hurdles, highlights

June 21, 2024 by Lane Kimble

MADISON, Wis. — The size, speed, and sound of jets taking off and landing kind of redefines the idea of work zone “traffic control,” but Bradley Buechel is getting used to it.

“If you can imagine the loudest noise you’ve heard, you can probably double it,” Buechel told WTBA.

The Michels Road and Stone Project Manager has worked on Austin Straubel Airport in Green Bay and Central Wisconsin Airport in Mosinee in his young career, but this project at Dane County Regional in Madison is a little different.

“It’s a very busy airport.  Getting to see planes take off and land constantly, all day long, it adds a different perspective to the work.”

Buechel showed WTBA around Michels’ taxiway and hold bay repaving at an airport that served 2.1 million passengers in 2023 and is also home to the 115th Fighter Wing’s Air National Guard base. Crews are tearing up 30-year-old concrete – damaged from years of snow removal and wear and tear – while preserving the underlying asphalt as best they can.  Then, 16 inches of fresh concrete goes over the top.

“When you look at it on paper, it looks like 50,000 square-yards, but when you actually step foot out here at the airport, it’s a significant amount of concrete,” Buechel said.

At 90 feet wide and several thousand feet long, the taxiway pavement takes about five paving passes and needs to be nearly twice as thick as a highway to support 100,000-pound planes.

DCRA Communications Director Michael Riechers told WTBA the airport’s three runways allow them to shift takeoffs and landings around the crews’ work, which is also overseen closely by FAA inspectors.

“On top of the engineering staff, there are always people out here kind of double checking, triple checking, making sure we are following everything we need to,” Buechel said.

WTBA asked if that makes him nervous or adds pressure.

“Not really,” Buechel said, after pausing to think.  “Because I know we’re doing it right.”

The project should be finished in late-August or early September, weather permitting.

Filed Under: News, Industry News, Video

BREAKING: WisDOT, FHWA publish draft Environmental Impact Study on potential I-39/90/94 projects

June 20, 2024 by Lane Kimble

An effort to repair aging roadway and reduce travel times along a vital stretch of I-39/90/94 between Madison and Wisconsin Dells took the next step this week.

Thursday, WisDOT and the Federal Highway Administration announced it completed a draft version of the I-39/90/94 Corridor Study.

The study highlights the importance of the 67-mile stretch for freight, commuters, and vacation traffic alike.

Notably, the study notes tourism’s importance to the potential projects on Fridays through Sundays throughout the summer months.

The draft notes drivers are 70% more likely to be injured in a secondary crash along the stretch.

WisDOT and FWHA says replacement is more effective than repair, due to more than 20% of the lane miles involved being in poor or worse condition by 2030.

READ MORE ABOUT WISDOT’S ANALYSIS HERE

WisDOT has held more than 100 public meetings regarding the study since 2022.  If the state’s Transportation Projects Commission considers and approves full funding of the replacement project this fall, the earliest construction would begin is 2030, according to the draft.

You can peruse the draft’s summary HERE.  Public comments are due by Aug. 12, 2024.

Filed Under: News, Industry News

Infrastructure helps drive state to record-setting 2023 tourism season

June 13, 2024 by Lane Kimble

MADISON, Wis. — A strong network of state and local roads helped nearly two million more people visit Wisconsin in 2023 compared to the previous year.

This week, Gov. Tony Evers’ office announced the state tourism industries generated $25 billion through 113 million visitors.  Financially, that marked a 5.4% increase in tourism spending over 2022.

“Wisconsin tourism powers the economy and strengthens the fabric of communities of all sizes,” said Wisconsin Tourism Secretary Anne Sayers.  “The historic impact of tourism reached every corner of Wisconsin and, in doing so, sustained livelihoods for thousands of our friends and neighbors.”

The tourism spending marked a new record high point in state history.  The governor celebrated the tourism achievements in his weekly radio address, which you can listen to HERE.

Visitors – many of whom traveled along vital interstates, such as I-39/90/94, I-41, and I-43 – helped support more than 173,000 full- and part-time jobs in Wisconsin last year.

Filed Under: News

‘We want them to go home’: WisDOT, WTBA members stress work zone safety during NW region event

June 11, 2024 by Lane Kimble

EAU CLAIRE, Wis. — The night of Oct. 23, 2023 will stick with Jacob Klages for a long time.

The WisDOT project engineer had just arrived for his shift at a bridge replacement job on I-94 in St. Croix County.  He looked up and saw smoke.

“It was [obvious] upon getting to the crash site that it was pretty bad,” Klages recalled.

Traffic had slowed due to a project lane closure, but a semi truck driver didn’t slow enough.  The chain reaction crash smashed through pickups, cars, and an SUV.  Two semi trucks were on fire.

Two people died.

“My drive home that night was a very nervous one,” Klages said.  “I could only think about that crash.  I drove the speed limit and I couldn’t think about anything else… If a motorist loses control of their vehicle in a work zone, what do you think my chances are of surviving being struck by a car, a semi, anything?”

His story was one of many told during WisDOT’s Northwest Region Work Zone Safety news conference Tuesday in Eau Claire.

It’s an ongoing effort between WTBA, contractors, and WisDOT to promote awareness and remind drivers about the risks we all face all season long.

In 2023, nine people died and more than 700 were injured in more than 2,100 crashes in Wisconsin work zones.  In the past five years, 64 people have died in work zone crashes in the state.

“The work zones are a temporary inconvenience.  The consequences of actions while driving through can be forever,” Northwest Region Deputy Director Brent Pickard said.

Just since February, Wisconsin State Patrol troopers warned and cited drivers more than 400 times for speeding in work zones in the 20-county Northwest region.  The WSP has boosted patrol efforts specifically around work zones this summer.

“Our employees are constantly huddling up in the mornings, talking about what’s going on for traffic and staying on the same page,” Hoffman Construction Safety Director Gary Kaas said.  “They see you (law enforcement) every day out there and it’s really improved the safety.”

Event speakers hope their stories stick with you as you hit the road this spring, summer, and fall – especially when you approach the warning signs, orange barrels, and the people working right behind them.

“I have always believed we have the best staff you could ever find and I think Jacob exemplifies that,” Pickard said.  “We want these folks safe, we want them to go home.”

Filed Under: News, Industry News

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