News:

The server restarts at 2 AM and 6 PM Eastern Time daily. This results in a short period of downtime, so if you get a 502 error at those times, that is why.
- Alex

Main Menu

Highway Engineering

Started by bwana39, July 03, 2020, 01:18:50 PM

Previous topic - Next topic

bwana39

I just looked at the rfp for engineering on a 15 mile stretch of interstate highway.  Roughly 50% is greenfield. Half if is upgrade existing ROW. The engineering services for said work (with an aproximate 15 year timeline) has a cap at 145,000,000.

THat is almost a million dollars a mile The entirity of it is either rural or the part that isn't rural is MOSTLy within a ROW that was bought and developed over a decade ago. A two-lane bypass was paved  over that part,

I gues the question is a million dollars a mile excessive? What about the staff engineers at the DOT?
Let's build what we need as economically as possible.


Big John

First, that is almost $10 million a mile.

The cost of roadway materials have zoomed up in the last few years.  Since it is an Interstate highway, there will be bridges and likely interchanges.  Each bridge will cost a pretty penny to build.  It is common to have 15% of the cost be in engineering.

bwana39

I am hoping that I don't understand the RFQ.  I am wondering if the cap is for all of the expense and the engineering is just a portion of the total.

That is not what I feel that I read, but technical terms may have a less generic definition and style than I think I see.  I agree my math was dismal. I completely blew this decimal point.







Let's build what we need as economically as possible.

jeffandnicole

Do you have a link to the RFQ or RFP? That appears to be more like estimated construction costs, not the cost of engineering services.