Skip to main content

Alabama 19, September 18, 2024

Page 1

State Supplement sponsored by:

ALABAMA STATE EDITION

A Supplement to:

SHIP WITHIN 48 HOURS

®

September 18 2024

SAME DAY PARTS AVAILABILITY 24 HOUR TECHNICAL SUPPORT BACKED BY A 75 YEAR BUSINESS Thousands in Service!

Vol. XXVI • No. 19

“The Nation’s Best Read Construction Newspaper… Founded in 1957.”

Affordable Price. Premium Service.

CALL 800-367-4937

Your Alabama Connection • Rich Olivier, Atlanta, GA • 1-800-409-1479

*On approved credit • Financing Available

Clayton McInnis photo

McInnis Construction of Summerdale, Ala., serves as the prime contractor on the project and is responsible for all aspects of construction and field engineering.

By Cindy Riley

Nearly a decade since work was halted due to a lack of funds, construction crews in Birmingham, Ala., are resuming work on the Northern Beltline. The $64.7 million first phase of the project calls for a four-lane highway spanning approximately 2 mi. to connect State Route 79 and State Route 75. “Building a northern interstate route across Jefferson County has been discussed for decades as a way to help move people and goods more efficiently through the area, increase economic development opportunities and provide greater access for residents and emergency responders to get where they need to go,” said DeJarvis Leonard, Alabama Department of Transportation (ALDOT) east central region engineer. “The Northern Beltline was first added to Birmingham’s long-range transportation plan more than 40 years ago. “Just as I-459 improved the flow of traffic around Birmingham, spurred growth and created jobs for residents in the southern and eastern parts of the Birmingham metro region, the Northern Beltline is expected to do the same for communities in the northern and western areas. When I-459 was completed in the early 1980s, it helped to ease congestion, increase economic development and generally improve the quality of life for Alabamians. We expect the same will happen with the Northern Beltline.” Alabama’s Congressional delegation secured $489 million over the next five years, which

CEG CORRESPONDENT

see ALDOT page 6

After 80 Years, Construction Still Supports Huntsville’s Redstone Arsenal Thirty years after the Sparkman Center complex opened at the Redstone Arsenal in Huntsville, Ala., construction is still a major part of the U.S. Army’s work at the arsenal. In fact, building projects have been ongoing at the base since it was established in 1941. Replacing the roofs at the Sparkman Center is among the many ongoing efforts at the sprawling facility. Named for the late Sen. John Sparkman, an Alabama Democrat who died in 1985, the center opened in August 1994 when six buildings were completed. Today’s $12 million roof project is expected to be finished around March, the

Redstone Rocket reported Sept. 4, but it is just one of a myriad of construction efforts under way at Redstone for the U.S. Department of Defense (DoD). On a recent weekday morning, Kris Leatherman sits at his desk in the U.S. Army Garrison Directorate of Public Works (DPW) at Redstone. As the construction branch chief in DPW’s engineering division, he was asked by a Rocket reporter about ongoing construction within the federal facility. “Here it is, all 10 pages,” he replied, referring to his stack of Excel sheets. “We average about $120 million a year in construc-

tion through our division. We’ve been averaging that for about three or four years now, so it’s a pretty solid number for us.” Those projects include sustainment, restoration and modernization efforts, he added, and include roads, utilities, roofs and more. “It covers major facility systems and other basic functions to maintain the backbone of the Arsenal,” Leatherman explained. Besides Army construction funding, the costs also include tenant-funded requirements for new construction and renovation of administrative, laboratory and testing facilities at the Redstone Arsenal.

“We’re helping the tenants accomplish their mission,” he said. The Army DPW’s engineering division receives assistance in managing these projects from the garrison’s base operations, resource management, contracting, master planning and environmental division. Among the other major Redstone Arsenal projects that DPW is overseeing include: • A $6 million Digital Simulation and Analysis Center, now under construction on Anderson Road for the Space and Missile Defense Command. It is due to be finished late this fall, according to Leatherman. see REDSTONE page 2


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Alabama 19, September 18, 2024 by Construction Equipment Guide - Issuu