The Wyoming Transportation Commission funded $14.6 million to various projects to improve the state’s infrastructure system.
The following is a list of the new projects awarded contract bids from the Wyoming Department of Transportation:
La Barge, Wyo.
LeGrand Johnson Construction of Logan, Utah, was conditionally awarded a $5.3 million contract for improvements to nearly 6 miles of US 189 immediately north of La Barge. The work will include grinding off 4 in. of deteriorating pavement, mixing it with additives and using it as the base for 4 in. of new pavement. The road also will be widened to include 3-ft safety shoulders. It will be the last section of US 189 to be widened, and the contract completion date is Nov. 30, 2016.
Laramie, Wyo.
Cheyenne’s Knife River was the low bidder at $3.9 million for improvements to 5 miles of I-80 between the Third Street Interchange in Laramie and the base of Telephone Canyon. The work will include milling off deteriorating pavement and replacing it with a new layer of pavement, and it is scheduled to be complete by Oct. 31, 2016.
Lovell, Wyo.
Cheyenne’s Reiman Corp. won a $207,000 contract to repair concrete barriers at two locations along US 14A about 24 miles east of Lovell. The barriers were damaged by two crashes. The contract completion date is Oct. 31.
Varied
Surface Preparation Technologies of Mechanicsburg, Penn., submitted the low bid of $624,000 for installing centerline rumble strips to improve safety on 400 miles of highways in Albany, Campbell, Converse, Fremont, Lincoln, Natrona, Niobrara, Sublette, Uinta and Weston counties by Aug. 31, 2016. Among the highways getting the rumble strips are WYO 59 from Douglas to the Montana border, WYO 50 from Gillette to Pine Tree Junction, US 85 from Mule Creek Junction to the South Dakota border, US 20-26 from Powder River to Shoshoni and US 287 south of Laramie.
Wilson, Wyo.
C.M. Owen Construction of Jackson won a $3.6 million contract to build a runaway truck arrestor system on WYO 22 about 2 miles west of Wilson. The highway’s downgrade on the east side of Teton Pass is 9.5%, one of the steepest on any Wyoming highway. The CatchNET system to be installed will be similar to one already in operation on US 16 west of Buffalo, which uses a series of arrestor cables to safely stop trucks carrying loads of up to 90,000 pounds and traveling up to 90 mph. That system has been used successfully six times. The contract completion date is Oct. 31, 2016.