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New Tunnel Opens, Crews Demolish Alaskan Way Viaduct

Tue April 09, 2019 - West Edition #8
Lori Tobias – CEG Correspondent


Looking southeast at the old Alaskan Way Viaduct. Look closely and you can see demolition under way in two places: the viaduct’s north end near the Battery Street Tunnel, and farther south near Pike Place Market.
(Washington State DOT photo)
Looking southeast at the old Alaskan Way Viaduct. Look closely and you can see demolition under way in two places: the viaduct’s north end near the Battery Street Tunnel, and farther south near Pike Place Market. (Washington State DOT photo)
Looking southeast at the old Alaskan Way Viaduct. Look closely and you can see demolition under way in two places: the viaduct’s north end near the Battery Street Tunnel, and farther south near Pike Place Market.
(Washington State DOT photo) Looking west at what remains of the Columbia Street on-ramp to southbound SR 99.
(Washington State DOT photo)
 Looking a bit like a giant metal dinosaur, an excavator with a concrete cracking attachment chews up the deck of the Alaskan Way Viaduct near the Seattle Aquarium.
(Washington State DOT photo)
 Cranes remove a girder from a section of the old Columbia Street on-ramp to southbound SR 99.
(Washington State DOT photo) Western Avenue from just south of Bell Street, where crews have demolished a stretch of the Alaskan Way Viaduct that crossed over the road. Remaining work includes removing the viaduct's foundations underground and restoring the road.
(Washington State DOT photo) Demolition machines take a bite out of the Alaskan Way Viaduct just west of Seattle’s Pike Place Market.
(Washington State DOT photo)
 View from the south end of the old Battery Street Tunnel. In the distance, crews are demolishing a section of the Alaskan Way Viaduct at the Western Avenue/Bell Street intersection.
(Washington State DOT photo) Just west of Pike Place Market, demolition is under way on the old southbound lanes of the Alaskan Way Viaduct.
(Washington State DOT photo)
 An excavator with a crusher attachment takes a bite of rubble that once was part of the Columbia Street on-ramp.
(Washington State DOT photo) Looking south on Post Avenue in Seattle’s Pioneer Square  after crews demolished a section of the old SR 99 on-ramp from Columbia Street. The ramp spanned this view for decades.
(Washington State DOT photo)

Now that Seattle's long-awaited SR 99 tunnel has opened to traffic, demolition of the Alaskan Way Viaduct can begin, moving the $3.3 billion, 30-project endeavor one step closer to the projected 2021 completion.

Seattle celebrated the opening of SR 99 with a party for the public, including a fun run, bike race and walking tour of the tunnel — an opportunity 70,000 people signed on for.

The Alaskan Way Viaduct Project has been in the works since 2009 when the Washington State Legislature voted to replace the waterfront section of the viaduct with a double-decker tunnel to be dug by a boring machine — soon dubbed Bertha, after Seattle's first female mayor Bertha Knight Landes. Tunneling began in July 2013, then came to an abrupt halt after Bertha broke down. It would be two years before tunneling could resume.

Now commuters are adapting to new routes. The tunnel opened on a Monday morning in February, then the snow came.

"Even though it was a snow day, there were 20,000 in it the first day, 60,000, the third," said Laura Newborn, project spokeswoman. "People got used to it very quickly. It's a very different experience with a lot of roads that changed along with the tunnel. We put out four videos on how to get around once the tunnel opened. The Viaduct had in-town exits and entrances; the tunnel exits and entrances stretch farther north and south. We built new roads around the exits and entrances and in two cases, roads that didn't even exist before. It's a very different commuting experience."

Demolition of the Alaskan Way Viaduct got under way in February and is scheduled for completion in six months. The old Viaduct along Seattle's waterfront will disappear in sections with mobile work zones in multiple locations.

"What makes this unique is the proximity of the buildings and the massive grid of utilities that we're going to be protecting," said Dan Hemenway, project manager of Kiewit Infrastructure West Company.

Demolition will start at the Columbia Street onramp north of Pike Street, then move north and south of Columbia.

"The path is dictated by many, many factors, one of those being the upcoming projects at the completion of our work," Hemenway said. "Removing the viaduct on the northern end of the project will allow the waterfront projects to start at the completion of our work. We will have two to three blocks secured off at a time. We'll start with the top deck, then remove the lower deck. Following the lower deck, we'll remove the columns. This process is repeated throughout the double-decker Viaduct. Where we have buildings five feet within the viaduct, we will remove the girders close to those buildings with a crane. In other cases, we will deploy barriers and tent it to keep rock from impacting the building."

WSDOT will use sensors to ensure noise and vibration is kept within limits, and said controlling dust also will be a priority.

"Demolition does make dust," Hemenway said. "We will be using a lot of water on the project, so we will be collecting that water, testing it and appropriately discharging it into the King County sewer.

"Alaskan Way will be open all the time. Our goal is to have as little impact as possible. All of that is a big challenge and we are well prepared for it."

When the Viaduct is gone, the city will build a new Alaskan Way, this one much wider with bike and bus lanes.

"That's what is designed to make up for the loss of the Viaduct," said Newborn. "That final configuration won't be done until 2021."

Some facts courtesy WSDOT about the project:

  • The SR 99 tunnel is the longest road tunnel in the lower 48 states (there is one longer in Alaska) and one of only two single-bored, double-deck tunnels in the world (the other is in Turkey.)
  • The deepest point of the tunnel is approximately 200 ft.
  • The SR 99 tunnel is designed to withstand strong earthquakes (roughly a 9.0 magnitude along the Cascadia Subduction Zone). Every piece of equipment installed in the tunnel has undergone seismic analysis.

CEG


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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