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Largest Construction Contract in TNDOT History Now Under Way

Mon June 10, 2019 - Southeast Edition
Brenda Ruggiero – CEG Correspondent


TNDOT’s reconstruction of Interstate 440, from Interstate 40 to Interstate 24 in Davidson County, includes removing substandard pavement and providing three lanes of travel in each direction for approximately 7.6 mi.
TNDOT’s reconstruction of Interstate 440, from Interstate 40 to Interstate 24 in Davidson County, includes removing substandard pavement and providing three lanes of travel in each direction for approximately 7.6 mi.
TNDOT’s reconstruction of Interstate 440, from Interstate 40 to Interstate 24 in Davidson County, includes removing substandard pavement and providing three lanes of travel in each direction for approximately 7.6 mi.  Two lanes in each direction are currently separated by a grassy, elevated median and auxiliary lanes located near the interchanges. The new I-440 design calls for replacement of the deteriorated concrete pavement with asphalt and removal of the median to provide a facility with at least six lanes (three lanes in each direction) throughout the corridor. According to TNDOT, roadway items for the project include 473,464 sq. yds. of concrete pavement removal, 195,162 cu. yds. of road and drainage excavation (unclassified), 252,018 tons of asphalt (All Mix), 158,787 SY of rubblization, 21,480 LF of concrete pipes, 47,662 LF of concrete barrier walls and 7,201 sq. yds. of concrete ramp.

The largest construction contract in Tennessee Department of Transportation (TDOT) history is currently underway near Nashville, utilizing the unique process of rubblization, which is new to the area.

According to the project website, the reconstruction of Interstate 440, from Interstate 40 to Interstate 24 in Davidson County, includes removing substandard pavement and providing three lanes of travel in each direction for approximately 7.6 mi. The project also is intended to address congestion and improve safety along the entire corridor.

The project involves replacing deteriorated concrete with asphalt throughout a 7-mi. corridor, removing an elevated grass median and adding a third through lane in some areas so the corridor will have three through lanes in each direction. The existing deteriorated concrete material will be used in the new asphalt roadway.

The prime contractor is Kiewit Infrastructure South Group, for a full dollar amount of $152.9 million. The Design-Build contract was awarded on Aug. 1, 2018, and the contract completion date is July 24, 2020.

According to Kathryn Schulte, community relations officer of TDOT, working around heavy traffic is one of the challenges with the project. This includes about 100,000 vehicles a day. It is a residential area, so noise impacts also are a factor. "440 is an interstate connector, so traffic impacts on the corridor can have impacts on I-65, I-24 and I-40, as well as arterial routes," Schulte said.

Two lanes in each direction are currently separated by a grassy, elevated median and auxiliary lanes located near the interchanges. The new design calls for replacement of the deteriorated concrete pavement with asphalt and removal of the median to provide a facility with at least six lanes (three lanes in each direction) throughout the corridor.

TDOT noted that I-440 was originally known as Four-Forty Parkway. It was reportedly designed and constructed in the 1980s as an east-to-west southern loop around the city of Nashville to address urban congestion created by a trucking industry boom. When the roadway was completed in 1987, it was considered a limited-access highway, linking I-40 west of the city with I-65 and I-24 south of the city. It included four lanes that could accommodate up to 64,000 vehicles per day. Traffic has increased to 100,000 vehicles per day at this point.

Early construction work on the project, including noise walls and ramp queue projects, began in November. The contractor planned to move west with operations to I-40 and then continue work from I-65 to I-24. By early spring, the entire corridor was under heavy construction. This involved removing the elevated grassy median and rubblizing concrete in the inside lanes. Once this work is completed, traffic will be shifted to the inside lanes while crews work on the outside lanes.

TDOT advised drivers to prepare for increased drive times along the I-440 corridor and surrounding areas beginning in March 2019 until the project completion in August 2020. Beginning in March, the contractor shifted traffic on I-440 in order to work in the median area. This includes restricting traffic to two lanes in each direction during the day and one lane in each direction at night, shortening I-440 merge lanes, and closing roadway shoulders.

According to Schulte, roadway items for the project include 473,464 sq. yds. of concrete pavement removal, 195,162 cu. yds. of road and drainage excavation (unclassified), 252,018 tons of asphalt (All Mix), 158,787 sq. yds. of rubblization, 21,480 LF of concrete pipes, 47,662 LF of concrete barrier walls, and 7,201 sq. yds. of concrete ramp.

Bridge items include 2.2 million lbs. of structural steel (beams), 665,630 lbs. of reinforcing steel and 43,126 CY of concrete. Major equipment used includes a Badger breaker (Rubblizer), concrete crusher and bridge gantry system. Major subcontractors for the project include Vulcan Construction Materials LLC, Stansell Electric Company Inc., Bell & Associates Construction LP, C & D Safety Company LLC, Superior Traffic Control LLC and Kimberly Inc.


Brenda Ruggiero

Brenda Ruggiero has written for CEG for over 20 years. She lives near the town of Accident in far western Maryland. Her favorite assignments so far involved interviews with Survivor’s Boston Rob and hot dog eating champion Joey Chestnut. Both were involved in construction at one time.

Brenda holds a BA in Mass Communication with a writing focus from Frostburg State University and minors in Public Relations and Political Science. She works full time as a staff writer for a weekly newspaper, the Garrett County Republican. She enjoys feature writing the most, which gives her the opportunity to talk to people and share their stories.

Brenda and her middle school sweetheart, Reuben, have been married for over 34 years and have three grown children and four cats.


Read more from Brenda Ruggiero here.





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