Skip to main content

Sterling wins accelerated bridge deal in Utah

Ralph L. Wadsworth Construction has won a US$122.7 million design-build project in the US.
By David Arminas April 15, 2021 Read time: 2 mins

Sterling Construction’s subsidiary Ralph L. Wadsworth Construction has been selected by Utah Department of Transportation to renew sections of the interstate I-80 and I-215 highways.

Work on the sections, which run through Salt Lake Valley, will start in May  and will take about two years to complete.

This project consists of the removal and replacement of existing concrete pavement, the design and replacement of four bridge structures and widening and adding lanes to several highway sections.

Two of the bridges will be constructed using accelerated bridge construction, sometimes called the ABC method. It involves the use of advanced technologies to assemble a bridge offsite and then transport it to site for installation, said Joe Cutillo, chief executive of Sterling.

“This sizeable project gives us the opportunity to showcase our highly differentiated accelerated bridge construction capabilities,” said Cutillo. “ABC…dramatically shortens the amount of time it takes to replace a bridge, which translates into substantially reduced traffic impacts and inconvenience to motorists in the area around a job site. Additionally, ABC substantially improves work-zone safety for both drivers and contractor personnel and minimises environmental impact, relative to conventional bridge construction methods.”

According to the website of Ralph L. Wadsworth Construction, the company is “a pioneer” in accelerated bridge construction and reduced construction schedules and traffic disruptions through lateral slides, bridge launches and self-propelled modular transporters (SPMTs), which can allow bridge replacements to be completed in a single 24-hour closure.

Among the company’s projects is the longest two-span bridge ever moved by SPMTs in the western hemisphere - the Sam White Bridge on Utah’s I-15 corridor expansion project. The 354-foot (105m), two-span steel girder Sam White Bridge over the Interstate I-15 in the city American Fork was designed by Michael Baker International engineering consultancy. The bridge was built in a staging area about 500 feet (152m) from the original structure and then moved into place in about five hours during the night using self-propelled modular transporters.

Sterling Construction’s various subsidiaries specialise in heavy civil, specialty services and residential projects in the primarily across southern US states, the Rocky Mountain region, California and Hawaii.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • The Cebu–Cordova Link Expressway
    September 19, 2021
    The 8.5km CCLEx, as it is known, will include the longest and tallest bridge in the Philippines when the structure is finished next year
  • New version of world’s longest floating bridge
    August 12, 2014
    The creation of a new version of the world’s longest floating bridge in Seattle, in the US state of Washington, is among the world’s most eye-catching current bridge engineering projects. It is an impressive example of the health of the bridge replacement sector, particularly in the US, leaving it well placed for growth. Guy Woodford reports Already the world’s longest floating bridge at over 2,310m long, the Governor Albert D Rosellini-Evergreen Point Floating Bridge in Seattle in the United States is g
  • Financial close for Louisiana’s Calcasieu Bridge
    August 19, 2024
    Sacyr said that the project is the company’s first transportation infrastructure private-public partnership contract in the US and calls for a total of $2.27 billion in construction investment.
  • Innovative Ohio River Bridge crossing
    March 31, 2016
    Work is underway on an innovative new bridge link over the Ohio River in the US.