Ames Construction built a new bridge on the Great Salt Lake Causeway that reestablished bi-directional water flow between the two arms of the lake.
When originally constructed in 1959, the bridge featured two culverts large enough for fresh water and small boats to pass between the North and South arms of the lake. However, by 2011, the causeway had sunk more than 15 feet, rendering the culverts ineffective.
The new, 180-foot-long, six-span precast box girder bridge was constructed in two phases. In Phase 1, crews built the first half of the bridge and shifted the existing railroad tracks to a temporary shoofly. In Phase 2, crews built the second half of the bridge and then shifted tracks to their final position.
Large armoring stone control berms were constructed on the north side of the bridge to control flows through the bridgeway, and channels were excavated underwater on both sides of the bridge.
While drilling steel casings into the causeway, crews encountered large amounts of metal and wood along the north side from railcars that had been buried during a major flood event in the 1980s to prevent the causeway from washing away. Ames crews drilled through the railcars to finish the pile driving operations, then excavated under the bridge to demolish and remove the boxcars.
The causeway was breached in early December 2016, reuniting the two sides of the lake.
Markets: Railroad
Location: Box Elder County, Utah
Completion: December 2016
Services:
- Bridge construction on causeway
Details:
- Pre-drilled 30-inch diameter steel casings 75 feet deep through the stone causeway.
- Drove 24-inch diameter piling through the pre-drilled holes to a depth of 200 feet in 49 places.
- Excavated channels on both sides of the bridge 250 feet into the lake.
2017 Small Project of the Year Award
National Railroad Construction and Maintenance Association