Skip to main content

Demolition starts on Seattle’s Alaska Way Viaduct

Demolition of the Alaska Way Viaduct in the northwest US city of Seattle is underway, including the filling in of a redundant road tunnel.
June 14, 2019 Read time: 2 mins
Coming down: Demolition of Seattle’s Alaska Way Viaduct, a 1950’s structure, began this winter (pic courtesy Philip Renaud)

Demolition of the Alaska Way Viaduct in the northwest US city of Seattle in Washington State is underway, including the filling in of a redundant road tunnel.

Demolition contractor Kiewit Infrastructure West picked up the contract estimated at around US$94 million, according to media reports. Work is expected to take up to two years and includes filling in the Alaska Way’s Battery Street Tunnel.

For each segment of the viaduct, the contractor is removing the road decks, then girders and crossbeams and finally the support columns. During demolition, barriers are installed to protect nearby buildings and water is sprayed on the work to keep down dust.

Tunnel work includes decommissioning and removing the utility and mechanical systems, removal of hazardous material from the tunnel and, when finished, the sealing of the two entrances.

Kiewit decided against using conveyor belts to move the material into the Battery Street Tunnel. Instead, rubble is trucked to a nearby sorting area where rebar is removed. The material is crushed into small piece and loaded onto side-dumping trucks that carry the debris to openings along the tunnel route that lead directly down into the tunnel itself. The trucks dump the material into a steel funnel over the openings and down it goes into the tunnel. It takes less than a minute for the material to crash down into the tunnel where it is then levelled out by workers. Vibratory rollers spread and compact the material in layers.

Prior to the demolition work, there were public petitions to keep the Battery Street Tunnel open for pedestrian and bicycle use. However, the Washington State Department of Transportation decided that the structure, in need of repair,  would have been extremely expensive to upgrade to modern seismic standards – an important feature for any structure along the west coast of the US and up into Canada. The region lies along the infamous San Andreas Fault making it prone to earthquakes.

The new Alaska Way’s tunnel lies directly under the old viaduct and was the subject of a World Highways Key Project Report in 2017.

<%$Linker:

2

External <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-16"?><dictionary /> 0 0 0 link-external https://www.worldhighways.com/categories/road-highway-structures/features/bertha-ends-her-alaskan-way-voyage-in-seattle/ false https://www.worldhighways.com/categories/road-highway-structures/features/bertha-ends-her-alaskan-way-voyage-in-seattle/ false false%>

 

Related Content

  • Bell is introducing its new B25E and B30E ADTs
    February 7, 2013
    Bell Equipment is now launching the new B25E and B30E ADTs to its range, seen first in prototype form at the Intermat show in Paris in 2012. Marc Schürmann managing director of Bell Equipment Europe said, “There are several improvements over the D series. The A frame design from the larger trucks is now being used in the smaller trucks. There is more suspension travel and this gives more comfort and allows higher travel speeds.” He added that the increased travel speed is of particular benefit when the truc
  • Euro Auctions is expanding its global operations with new acquisition
    January 6, 2017
    Euro Auctions is revealing its expansion plans for 2013 with the addition of a new site to its operations. Based in Dromore, Northern Ireland, Euro Auctions has been conducting unreserved auctions of industrial equipment and construction machinery since 1998. The company has permanent auction sites in Northern Ireland, England, Germany, Spain, Australia and now the USA.
  • Euro Auctions is expanding its global operations with new acquisition
    March 27, 2013
    Euro Auctions is revealing its expansion plans for 2013 with the addition of a new site to its operations. Based in Dromore, Northern Ireland, Euro Auctions has been conducting unreserved auctions of industrial equipment and construction machinery since 1998. The company has permanent auction sites in Northern Ireland, England, Germany, Spain, Australia and now the USA.
  • VIDEO: M6 motorway link taking shape between Knutsford and Bowdon
    August 23, 2016
    In the UK, work to connect sections of the new €223 million A556 Knutsford to Bowdon dual carriageway, between the M6 and M56 in Cheshire, will get underway in earnest at the weekend with the opening of its first bridge.

    The route of the road, forming a link between junction 19 of the M6 motorway at Knutsford and junction 7 of the M56 motorway at Bowdon, has been taking shape for some time.