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New I-16/I-95 Interchange Will Benefit Port of Savannah

Wed September 16, 2020 - Southeast Edition #20
Eric Olson - CEG CONTRIBUTING EDITOR


Drone overhead of I-95 passing over I-16. I-95 heads northwest toward the right side of the image; I-16 travels northeast from the bottom to the top.
Drone overhead of I-95 passing over I-16. I-95 heads northwest toward the right side of the image; I-16 travels northeast from the bottom to the top.
Drone overhead of I-95 passing over I-16. I-95 heads northwest toward the right side of the image; I-16 travels northeast from the bottom to the top. Lane Lee Trucking LLC (DBE) shown delivering fill material at the SW quadrant of the interchange. This material was used to build a crane pad. Concrete pile after cutoff. Tied rebar is in place for a pier footing for one of the two new interchange bridges. Contractors are using a pre-engineered slide rail system during the excavation of the bridge foundations.

Georgia's Port of Savannah is a major East Coast shipping and receiving center, home to the largest single-terminal container facility of its kind in North America.

The port is made up of two modern, deep-water complexes: The Garden City Terminal and the Ocean Terminal. The first of the two is the fourth busiest container handling operation in the United States, encompassing more than 1,200 acres and moving millions of tons of containerized cargo annually.

An endless number of container trucks are processed through the ports each day to and from points across the country. Along the Savannah River, the facilities are aided by their access to a pair of nearby interstate highways: the 1,900-mi. I-95 north-south freeway and the shorter, 154-mi.-long I-16, which connects Savannah to Macon and I-75, another primary U.S. transportation artery.

Freeway Intersection Being Upgraded

At the point where I-95 crosses over I-16, just a few miles west of downtown Savannah, the Georgia Department of Transportation (GDOT) has undertaken a major construction project, primarily along I-16, to keep traffic moving safely and efficiently.

The 16@95 Improvement Projects are being funded through the transportation agency's Major Mobility Investment Program (MMIP), a first-of-its-kind enterprise to create more road capacity, improve freight movement and decrease travel times on Peach State routes primarily used by heavy trucks.

The effort is being built by the Savannah Mobility Contractors (SMC) Joint Venture, a group headed by the prime contractors, N.Y.-based Dragados USA and Prince Contracting in Tampa, Fla. The design team is led by Jacobs Engineering, headquartered in Dallas, Texas.

The SMC's major subcontractors include Baker Constructors in Savannah and C.W. Matthews Contracting in Marietta.

The estimated $295 million project began in early 2020, with an expected opening in 2022.

I-16 Corridor's Expansion, Bridge Work

The main goals of the 16@95 work are to widen the I-16 mainline corridor, along with reconstructing six bridges along the route, replace four other spans and build three new bridges.

The widening of I-16 will be toward the inside median, increasing the general purpose roadway from two lanes to three in each direction to create a six-lane freeway from just west of the I-16/I-95 interchange east to I-516 in downtown Savannah, one of three routes connecting to the port.

Interstate 16's lane expansion to the east of the interchange is also necessary to accommodate future growth, especially to support the continued expansion of the Georgia Ports Authority.

Plans call for the GDOT and the SMC joint venture to replace two existing loop ramps within the 16@95 interchange, employing innovative turbine configuration system-to-system ramps, explained Denise Grabowski, a consultant with Symbioscity, a Savannah urban planning firm.

"The most unique aspect of the project is the interchange reconstruction, which will be the first partial-turbine interchange in Georgia," continued Grabowski, who, through her company, is also the spokesperson for the SMC Joint Venture on the building enterprise.

The project's design will allow for traffic to move through the interchange at higher speeds with minimal impact to the existing interchange, she said, as the new bridges will move diverging and merging traffic away from the main interstate connection. Besides minimizing congestion and making I-16 at I-95 safer overall, turbine configuration lowers the impacts to motorists and truckers during construction.

Grabowski noted that minor upgrades will be made to two of the four current cloverleaf ramps (I-16 eastbound to I-95 northbound and I-95 northbound to I-16 westbound). In addition, crews will also eliminate the other two cloverleaf ramps (I-95 southbound to I-16 eastbound and I-16 westbound to I-95 southbound).

"The full cloverleaf design was sufficient when the interchange was initially built, but with current and future traffic volumes, smoother, more direct, and more efficient connections are needed between I-95 and I-16," Grabowski continued.

A collector-distributor (CD) lane on I-95 northbound will be built to separate the vehicles exiting and entering from the I-95 mainline traffic and allow unimpeded access from the I-16 cloverleaf ramps. CD lanes are designed to run parallel to the main travel lanes of a highway to connect them to access roads or entrance ramps to improve traffic flow, speed, and safety.

Other upgrades to I-16 and its interchange with I-95 include:

  • The addition of ultramodern, energy efficient LED lighting at the intersection;
  • Installing Intelligent Transportation Systems (ITS) technology, such as cameras and changeable message signs for fast incident response and improved real-time communication with traveling motorists through the GA 511 system; and
  • The construction of noise barriers at the southeast quadrant of the I-16/I-95 interchange and I-16 eastbound. There are three separate sound walls of 5,200 ft., 850 ft. and 2,700 ft. in length — all with a light gull gray color with a stone pattern and a graffiti-proof coating.
Freeways Improved for Quicker Evacuation

Most of the SMC Joint Venture's work is along I-16 between I-95 and I-516. There are over seven mi. of roadwork on I-16, in contrast to only two mi. of construction on I-95.

Both I-16 and I-95 serve as evacuation routes for any declared emergency in the area. In case of a mandatory evacuation from coastal Georgia, the I-16 eastbound lanes become contra-flow lanes in which all lanes of the freeway will only support westbound traffic from Savannah to U.S. 441 in Dublin, 125 mi. away.

But Grabowski explained that hurricane preparation improvements are also part of the 16@95 project.

"The Georgia DOT will replace the two existing one-lane, emergency-use median crossovers with one two-lane, emergency-use median crossover between I-95 and Dean Forest Road, about three miles to the east of the interchange," she said. "This crossover will improve speed variation, logistics, decrease delay and congestion, and better prepare the region for an evacuation, which is one of the most demanding set of circumstances regarding transportation operations and management."

Construction Activities Ramping Up

The GDOT had been planning the 16@95 Improvement Project for several years, with the environmental processing beginning in 2016, but land-clearing only started this past February.

Contractor activities throughout the rest of this year will be concentrated in the first of three areas (Zones A, B and C) and will consist of more tree clearing and grubbing, construction of the foundations for the new interchange bridges, demolition of the existing I-95 northbound bridge and the expansion of lanes on I-16 from the interchange east to Dean Forest Road.

In general, the widening part of the project will be performed from Zone A to Zone B (from just west of Dean Forest Road to just east of Chatham Parkway) to Zone C (Chatham Parkway to the I-16@I-516 interchange near the heart of the city).

But Grabowski said some construction may span the length of the entire corridor and an overlap of activities can be expected in each of the zones.

"Most of the improvements will be focused on one zone at a time in order to minimize disruptions to the community, businesses, and motorists," she explained.

Bridge Pilings Taking a Hammering

Crews are currently busy driving piles for the deep foundations required to supply the structural support necessary for the two new partial-turbine interchange bridges.

After conducting test piles to confirm soil conditions and stability, precast concrete piles are being manufactured specifically for the 16@95 Improvement Projects, with at least 700 piles estimated to be needed for the entire effort. After they are set in place, construction will begin on the footings, columns, and caps, Grabowski said.

"Most of the footings for the columns include five piles for structural support," she continued. "As currently scheduled, the foundation work for the two partial-turbine bridges is anticipated to be completed by the end of this year."

The equipment used by the SMC Joint Venture is going to be made up of entirely of earthmovers, hammers and cranes. In fact, the first crane arrived at the freeway interchange in May from Dozier Crane & Machinery, a dealership in nearby Pooler.

Temporary paving operations began in July to accommodate lane shifts necessary for further construction, while more permanent road surfacing is predicted to start late this year. CEG


Eric Olson

A writer and contributing editor for CEG since 2008, Eric Olson has worked in the business for more than 40 years.

Olson grew up in the small town of Lenoir, NC in the foothills of the Blue Ridge Mountains, where he began covering sports for the local newspaper at age 18. He continued to do that for several other dailies in the area while in college at Appalachian State University. Following his graduation, he moved on to gain experience at two other publications before becoming a real estate and special features writer and editor at the Winston-Salem Journal for 10 years. Since 1999 he has worked as a corporate media liaison and freelance writer, in addition to his time at CEG.

He and his wife, Tara, have been married for 33 years and are the parents of two grown and successful daughters. His hobbies include collecting history books, watching his beloved Green Bay Packers and caring for his three dogs and one cat.


Read more from Eric Olson here.





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