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Iconic Pulaski Skyway Receives $1B Facelift

Four years into the most costly project undertaken by the New Jersey Department of Transportation, work is on track as planned to finish rehabilitation of the Pulaski Skyway by 2020.

Mon April 04, 2016 - Northeast Edition
Lori Tobias


NJDOT photo.
Four years into the most costly project undertaken by the New Jersey Department of Transportation, work is on track as planned to finish rehabilitation of the Pulaski Skyway by 2020.
NJDOT photo. Four years into the most costly project undertaken by the New Jersey Department of Transportation, work is on track as planned to finish rehabilitation of the Pulaski Skyway by 2020.

NJDOT photo.
Four years into the most costly project undertaken by the New Jersey Department of Transportation, work is on track as planned to finish rehabilitation of the Pulaski Skyway by 2020. 
 NJDOT photo.
The DOT is now preparing to reroute traffic on the iconic 84-year-old bridge so that re-decking can continue.  NJDOT photo.
The work on the bridge, which spans the Hackensack and Passaic Rivers and runs between Newark and Jersey City, is budgeted at $1 billion. 
 NJDOT photo.
One of the biggest challenges is that the deck panels are not uniform. 
 NJDOT photo.
The Pulaski Skyway is labeled a “New Jersey Treasure.” It was featured in Orson Welles’ “War of the Worlds,” and more recently in the opening credits of “The Sopranos.”
 NJDOT photo.
The project is split into 10 contracts, four have been awarded with the first contract of $22.7 million complete.
 NJDOT photo.
The Skyway was awarded the Most Beautiful Steel Bridge by the American Institute of Steel Construction in 1932 and is named in memory of General Casimir Pulaski, the Polish-born hero of the American Revolutionary War.
 NJDOT photo.
Contract 4, which began in July 2014, and is budgeted at $211.7 million, is re-decking the entire southbound lanes, as well as a section of the northbound lanes.

Four years into the most costly project undertaken by the New Jersey Department of Transportation, work is on track as planned to finish rehabilitation of the Pulaski Skyway by 2020. The DOT is now preparing to reroute traffic on the iconic 84-year-old bridge so that re-decking can continue. The work on the bridge, which spans the Hackensack and Passaic Rivers and runs between Newark and Jersey City, is budgeted at $1 billion.

“It's definitely an expensive project,” said DOT spokesman Stephen Schapiro. “And it's definitely challenging.”

One of the biggest challenges is that the deck panels are not uniform.

“It's kind of like a jigsaw puzzle in sizes and shapes,” he said. “That's just the way the bridge is built. When this bridge opened in 1932, bridges of this nature were kind of new. You didn't have your big bridges yet. This was one of the earliest load bridges. One of the engineers of the bridge was originally a railroad bridge designer, and the Pulaski resembles a railroad bridge. It's very robust. That's one reason we are here 84 years later and still driving on the original deck. The new deck is actually replacing the original deck from 1932.”

The project is split into 10 contracts, four have been awarded with the first contract of $22.7 million complete. The $104 million contract 2 is the rehabilitation of the Hoboken and Conrail Viaducts. Contract 3, which began in July 2013, and is budgeted at $143 million, involves the re-decking of a large portion of the northbound lanes and contract 4, which began in July 2014, and is budgeted at $211.7 million, is re-decking the entire southbound lanes, as well as a section of the northbound lanes.

“What is going to be happening is we will be implementing a cross over, traffic will be rerouted from the southbound lanes to the newly completed northbound lanes,” Schapiro said. “They've been working on the northbound lanes. Some are complete so we can move traffic onto those, which allows them to begin work on southbound lanes. As more of the northbound lanes are completed, the traffic will stay in the northbound lanes as opposed to having to go back to the southbound.”

The costs for contracts 3 and 4 were originally $126 million and $210 million respectively, but costs escalated after contractors discovered the steel beneath the decks had significantly deteriorated.

“Once we started doing the work, we found greater deterioration of the steel than anticipated,” Schapiro said. “The steel is under the deck and we couldn't actually see it until we got the deck up. That's the additional cost in contracts 3 and 4. We identified it in contract 3 early on, and it was incorporated into contract 4. They knew to expect it in contract 4 and made provisions for it.”

Workers also discovered a “tremendous amount” of deterioration in the steel beams.

“It looked like Swiss cheese,” Schapiro said. “Some of the webbing is just gone. When we were getting ready to implement the closures, we took reporters up and said, this is what we are dealing with, and people understood. This bridge has served us very well, and this project will extend the life of the bridge another 75 years.”

The Pulaski Skyway is labeled a “New Jersey Treasure.” It was featured in Orson Welles' “War of the Worlds,” and more recently in the opening credits of “The Sopranos.” The Skyway was awarded the Most Beautiful Steel Bridge by the American Institute of Steel Construction in 1932 and is named in memory of General Casimir Pulaski, the Polish-born hero of the American Revolutionary War.

“The bridge itself is 3.5 miles long,” Schapiro said. “When people think of large bridges, they think the Golden Gate or the George Washington Bridge, but those are much smaller. It's one of those bridges, certainly locally, that is iconic,” Schapiro said. “It looks different from other bridges. It goes over rivers and land and stays elevated. It's sort of this big industrial steel structure — very distinctive in how it looks. Growing up here, you always know it.”

The remaining six contracts include the full rehabilitation of the Kearny and Broadway ramps, steel repairs to the substructure and superstructure, strengthening and seismic retrofitting from Pier 61 through Pier 79, which includes the Hackensack River crossing, seismic retrofits and rehabilitation of the superstructure and substructure from Pier 79 to Pier 98, which includes the main span over the Passaic River, and painting the steel structure.

Lori Tobias

Lori Tobias is a journalist of more years than she cares to count, most recently as a staff writer for The Oregonian and previously as a columnist and features writer for the Rocky Mountain News. She is the author of the memoir, Storm Beat - A Journalist Reports from the Oregon Coast, and the novel Wander, winner of the Nancy Pearl Literary Award in 2017. She has freelanced for numerous publications, including The New York Times, The Denver Post, Alaska Airlines in-flight, Natural Home, Spotlight Germany, Vegetarian Times and the Miami Herald. She is an avid reader, enjoys kayaking, traveling and exploring the Oregon Coast where she lives with her husband Chan and rescue pups, Gus and Lily.


Read more from Lori Tobias here.





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