CALIFORNIA STATE EDITION
A Supplement to:
October 6 2024 Vol. V • No. 20
“The Nation’s Best Read Construction Newspaper… Founded in 1957.” Your California Connection – Sharon Swanson – 1-760-518-4336 – sswanson@cegltd.com
Balfour Beatty Hits Four General Contractors Effecting Project Milestones in SR 33 Repairs After 2023 Landslide San Diego County
Balfour Beatty celebrated the completion of the $84.5 million Youth Transition Campus Phase 2 project. This facility replaces the former 70-yearold Juvenile Hall facilities with a modern campus that is a nationwide model for therapeutic, traumainformed and “home-like” youth rehabilitation to improve outcomes for high-risk youth in San Diego County.
Balfour Beatty has achieved major milestones on two San Diego County projects, including the groundbreaking of the East County Crisis Stabilization Unit in El Cajon, Calif., and the completion of the Youth Transition Campus Phase 2 project in Kearny Mesa, Calif. Balfour Beatty and county of San Diego recently broke ground on the $29 million East County Crisis Stabilization Unit (CSU). The CSU is designed to provide individuals a safe space to stabilize and recover amid a behavioral health crisis in the area as well as help reduce emergency department patient loads, particularly at the nearby Sharp Grossmont Hospital, which has one of the busiest emergency rooms in the country. see BALFOUR page 4
A Caterpillar 315 hydraulic excavator helps restore a road shoulder on State Route 33.
Irwin Rapoport
Operations continue on State Route (SR) 33 to repair the damage from a January 2023 landslide, with crews from R&R Demolition and Grading Corp. and three other general contractors making solid progress in Ventura to complete the emergency repairs, according to the California Department of Transportation (Caltrans). In April, Marc Bischoff, a Caltrans District 7 public information officer said, “Emergency repairs and traffic control will continue on State Route 33 between mile 14.35 ([near Cozy Dell Trailhead] and mile 44.13 [almost two miles north of Pine Mountain summit] in Los Padres National Forest at least through this summer. “Approximately 32 miles of highway were closed for emergency repairs from Jan. 10 to Dec. 18, 2023, when one-lane alternating traffic control with solar-powered signals was implemented through
CEG CORRESPONDENT
seven construction zones. “Outside of those six locations, one lane is open to traffic in each direction, as is normal,” he added. “This section of SR-33 experienced extensive mudslides, rockslides, erosion and sections of collapsed roadway from extensive storms during the winter of 20222023. Additional rainstorms this past winter caused intermittent work stoppage. The one-lane alternating traffic control also slows the reconstruction process. “There are still four retaining walls to be built and construction of the first wall at post mile 14.13 is under way. Slope and roadway repair and drainage installation continue at multiple locations. The estimated total construction cost for all repairs is $35 million.” The contractors are Staples Construction, Union Engineering, Granite Construction and R & R Demolition and Grading. see LANDLSIDE page 8