Skip to main content

Parsons wins award for Caldecott Tunnel

Parsons has won an award for its work on the Caldecott Fourth Bore Project. The award comes from Roads & Bridges magazine as the top (US) road project of 2013. Parsons worked as prime consultant on the US$417 million tunnel project, working with Jacobs Associates. The project involved constructing a fourth bore through the Berkeley Hills, near Oakland, California. Parsons was responsible for preliminary engineering and the final design of the tunnel, the operations building, and two associated roadway proje
November 8, 2013 Read time: 2 mins
3220 Parsons has won an award for ITS work on the Caldecott Fourth Bore Project. The award comes from Roads & Bridges magazine as the top (US) road project of 2013. Parsons worked as prime consultant on the US$417 million tunnel project, working with Jacobs Associates. The project involved constructing a fourth bore through the Berkeley Hills, near Oakland, California. Parsons was responsible for preliminary engineering and the final design of the tunnel, the operations building, and two associated roadway projects. The tunnel was excavated using sequential excavation, also known as the New Austrian Tunneling Method.

The Caldecott Fourth Bore Project represents a partnership between the 2410 Federal Highway Administration, the 2451 California Department of Transportation, the 7419 Metropolitan Transportation Commission, the Contra Costa Transportation Authority, and the Alameda County Transportation Commission. When it opens to traffic in late 2013, the Fourth Bore will relieve traffic congestion in the off-peak direction along a heavily traveled section of State Route 24 by permanently dedicating two bores to westbound traffic and two bores to eastbound traffic.  This multimillion-dollar project is one of the largest recipients of 1088 American Recovery and Reinvestment Act funding in the nation, a testament to ITS regional importance.

Related Content

  • Kuwait’s Sheikh Jaber al-Ahmad Al-Sabah Causeway opens
    August 27, 2019
    World Highways revisits the world’s fourth longest sea bridge - four years to construct and which has slashed travel time between Kuwait’s largest island and the capital city
  • Integrated corridor management offers transportation efficiency
    May 28, 2013
    In the Intelligent Transportation Systems world, the concept of managing roadway or transportation corridors is not new. Smart Corridor concepts have existed for some time, such as the Santa Monica Smart Corridor system from the 1990s. Across the world, a new emerging model for operating roadway transportation networks called integrated corridor management (ICM) has emerged. This is particularly true in California, where several new ICM projects have or are being deployed. There is a new paradigm for corrid
  • LA bus lanes planned
    May 17, 2022
    New bus lanes are planned for Los Angeles.
  • Stantec wins upgrade to Florida SR 91
    July 29, 2019
    Canadian contractor Stantec is to lead design work for a 16km upgrade and widening of State Road 91 in the US state of Florida. Work will turn the section of road through Lake County into price-managed lanes for improved travel reliability, according to the company which will be working for Florida’s Turnpike Enterprise, part of the Florida Department of Transportation. Turnpike Enterprise operates a 740km-system of limited access toll highways Stantec’s design for the project, with a construction cos