1 / 24

Canada-United States Transportation Border Working Group Garfield Dales

Canada-United States Transportation Border Working Group Garfield Dales Manager, Project Delivery Office Windsor Border Initiatives Implementation Group Ministry of Transportation November 8, 2012. Bi-national study conducted in Canada and the U.S.

pomona
Download Presentation

Canada-United States Transportation Border Working Group Garfield Dales

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Canada-United States Transportation Border Working Group Garfield Dales Manager, Project Delivery Office Windsor Border Initiatives Implementation Group Ministry of Transportation November 8, 2012

  2. Bi-national study conducted in Canada and the U.S. Recommended plan for access road, Canadian inspection plaza, bridge crossing, U.S. inspection plaza, Interstate connection. Ontario is leading the delivery of the Windsor-Essex Parkway Ontario and Canada working together to ensure appropriate interface between inspection plaza and Windsor-Essex Parkway Limits of The Windsor-Essex Parkway

  3. Transportation Features: 11 km in length New urban 6 lane freeway New parallel 4 lane service road network Below-grade freeway Full illumination Stormwater management facilities Advanced traffic management system Community and Environmental Features: 11 tunnels covering 1.8 km of freeway More than 300 acres of green space 20 km of recreational trails Noise mitigation measures Extensive landscaping Special measures to protect wildlife Significant Investment: 12,000 project-related jobs anticipated $1.4 B investment

  4. The Parkway and Infrastructure Ontario • One of the most significant single highway investments in Ontario’s history • First Ontario road project to be delivered under Alternative Financing and Procurement model • $1.4 billion – DBFM model with a 30-year concession • Procurement process was 18 months beginning June 2009 and ending December 2010 with Financial and Commercial Close • The third party value for money assessment of the Windsor-Essex Parkway was positive

  5. AFP/P3 Approach - Design-Build-Finance-Maintain Model • Infrastructure Ontario and Ministry of Transportation collaboration to ensure successful, on-time/on-budget completion of the Parkway and: • Avoid duplication of expertise and costs. • Ensure effective, timely decision-making. • Encourage Innovation • Transfer project risks to private sector • 30-year ‘warranty’ on the Parkway ensures it is kept in excellent working condition and ensures standards are maintained • Incentive for private sector to: • Build in quality upfront • Maintain the Parkway in good condition for 30 years • Construction payments are made only when sections of the Parkway open to traffic • The private sector partner’s obligation to repay lenders on time keeps construction on schedule

  6. Procurement Milestones • February 2009 Pre-procurement Market Sounding • June 2009 Request for Qualifications issued • July 2009 International and local contractors meet and greet • October 2009 Three teams short-listed • December 2009 Short-listed teams and local contractors networking session • December 2009 Request for Proposals released to short-listed bidders • August 2010 Proposals received from all three short-listed bidders • November 2010 Identification of Preferred Proponent • December 2010 Commercial/Financial close • August 2011 Full construction start

  7. PRIME TEAM MEMBERS Developer – Risk Capital Funders Maintenance and Rehabilitation CONSTRUCTION PRIME TEAM MEMBERS DESIGN PRIME TEAM MEMBERS

  8. The Design Team – Parkway Infrastructure Engineers • design management, highways & roads, structures, pumping stations • municipal roads, urban design/landscaping, traffic staging, utilities, drainage & storm water • geotechnical & pavement design, environmental protection, enhancement & mitigation • electrical works, ATMS/ITS, traffic signals, life safety, security • temporary diversion roads & staging • temporary diversion roads

  9. Construction Partners

  10. Jan Feb Mar Apr Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Jan Feb Jun Jul Sep Oct Nov Mar Apr May 2010 2011 2014 2015 • Construction Schedule • Financial Close December 15, 2010 • Start of Construction: Summer 2011 • Phase 1 substantial completion: Summer 2014 • Phase 2 substantial completion: Summer 2014 • Open to traffic: Fall 2014 • Approximately 45 months based on WEMG’s schedule Phase 3 Completion (Substantial Completion) Commercial Close Financial Close Project Final Completion Phase 2 Completion Phase 1 Completion

  11. Property Assembly Over 900 properties were required and the Province assumed portions of municipal roadways Less than 130 properties expropriated Over $270 million invested to date in property acquisition Approximately 340 buildings demolished

  12. Pre-construction Activities – Community Benefits • Ontario is supporting a three-year University of Windsor research project on the regional impacts of the Parkway and also has partnered with St. Clair College, local emergency services organizations, Walpole Island First Nation and Workforce WindsorEssex, among others. • Unique partnerships have been established between the Province and various organizations: • W.E. Pay it Forward

  13. Construction of the Parkway began in August, 2011

  14. Species at Risk work

  15. Environmental Protection and Benefits Special care has been taken in the configuration of the Windsor-Essex Parkway. Distinct community and cultural features, such as the Ojibway Prairie Complex have been preserved for generations to come. The Parkway Landscape Plan envisions a green space corridor that integrates and connects with local parks and trails, links other protected natural areas, supports viable natural communities, and buffers surrounding communities from the new freeway. A number of species at risk were identified within the Parkway corridor including: Colic-root Common Hop-tree Dwarf Hackberry Dense Blazing Star Kentucky Coffee-tree Willowleaf Aster Butler’s Gartersnake Eastern Foxsnake Eastern Prairie Fringed Orchid Red Mulberry Permits received under the Endangered Species Act, 2007

  16. Construction includes 12 temporary diversion roads to carry traffic around construction. • Eight diversions totalling 26 lane kms have opened this year

  17. 10 tunnels are under construction

  18. Six bridges are under construction

  19. Retained Soil System Walls

  20. New multi-lane roundabout

  21. Extensive use of Social Media

  22. Economic Impact • Estimated 12,000 project related jobs • $1.4 Billion investment in Windsor-Essex • Over 3200 people trained to work on the project to date. • Improved transportation network

  23. Learn more • www.weparkway.ca • www.infrastructureontario.ca • Follow us on Twitter • www.twitter.com/WEParkway • Like us on Facebook • www.facebook.com/weparkway • View photos • www.flickr.com/photos/weparkway • View video • www.youtube.com/weparkway

More Related