Oregon Preparing for Export: Assessing the Seismic Challenges of a Liquified Natural Gas Plant
November 21, 2015 in Featured , Feature
Oregon Preparing for Export: Assessing the Seismic Challenges of a Liquified Natural Gas Plant

In the international port of Coos Bay, Ore., construction will begin in late 2016 on a liquefied natural gas (LNG) export terminal that will be the largest private construction project in the state’s history. The bay is separated from the ocean by a tongue of land varying in width from 0.3 miles at the entrance to 1.9 miles at Jordan Cove, where the plant will be built. The facility requires access to the ocean for the deep draft vessels that will move its cargo to customers across the Pacifi...

Prioritizing Data Management: The Shortest Distance to Project Quality
November 21, 2015 in Featured , Feature
Prioritizing Data Management: The Shortest Distance to Project Quality

By Darius Šimkūnas In the Baltic States, Kelprojektas is the largest group of infrastructure engineering companies that designs transport infrastructure, public buildings and engineering systems as well as conducts regional planning. The company was established in 1956 and has successfully delivered more than 6,000 infrastructure projects. Today, there are more than 300 employees working with the most-advanced software, including the largest number of Autodesk-certified specialists in the Balti...

Better in 3D: How 3D Modeling Helped Overcome Complexity in Building the Longest Cable-stayed Bridge in Africa
October 28, 2015 in Featured , Feature , Bridges
Better in 3D: How 3D Modeling Helped Overcome Complexity in Building the Longest Cable-stayed Bridge in Africa

When Morocco’s highway company, Autoroutes Du Maroc (ADM), undertook a highway bypass project in 2010 that would cross the Bouregreg River, they could have built a traditional viaduct. Instead, they set out to construct Africa’s longest and tallest cable-stayed bridge. The resulting project presented unique and complex challenges that called for innovative solutions. The Bouregreg River runs from the Atlas Mountains to the Atlantic coast between the cities of Rabat and Salé in western Morocco....

Oslo Airport Expansion: Open BIM Approach Improves Project Efficiency
October 1, 2015 in Featured , Feature
Oslo Airport Expansion: Open BIM Approach Improves Project Efficiency

By Bjørnar Markussen Avinor Oslo Airport plays a crucial role as the hub of Norway’s aviation system, serving domestic and international passenger and cargo flights. Upon opening in 1998, the new airport boosted its capacity to handle 17 million passengers annually, but less than a decade later, it was clear that demand would soon outgrow capacity. It was then that the board of Avinor, owner of the airport, began planning a major expansion in close collaboration with airlines and handling...

Crystal River Works to Save Manatees and the Local Economy
October 1, 2015 in Featured , Feature
Crystal River Works to Save Manatees and the Local Economy

Crystal River, Fla., is the self-proclaimed “home of the manatee.” An estimated 300,000 tourists visit Crystal River each year, many of them to see and experience the graceful manatees, the giant herbivores often referred to as “sea cows.” For a town with a population of only 3,100, such an influx of people represents an important economic boon for everyone in the area. The geography and ecology of the Crystal River region is perfect for manatees, which often weigh up to 1,300 pounds. Because...

Ordnance Survey Ireland Creates an Authoritative National Spatial Data Infrastructure
September 25, 2015 in Featured , Feature
Ordnance Survey Ireland Creates an Authoritative National Spatial Data Infrastructure

Ordnance Survey Ireland (OSi), Ireland’s national mapping agency, has developed a standardized, authoritative digital referencing framework that enables consistent referencing and integration of national data related to location. This visionary framework, known as Prime2, allows GIS data users to accurately integrate and use multiple data sources for improved analysis and decision making, resource optimization, and efficiency gains. More than six years in the making, the new spatial data refere...

Bridging the Gap Between Inspections and Decisions
August 27, 2015 in Featured , Feature , Bridges
Bridging the Gap Between Inspections and Decisions

Bridge safety hasn’t always been top of mind for legislators in the United States. The impetus for creating standards and collecting information on how structurally sound the bridges in this country was the collapse of the Silver Bridge in 1967, which spanned the Ohio River between Point Pleasant, WV, and Kanauga, Ohio. The tragedy claimed the lives of 46 people and caused the federal government to quickly mandate regular bridge inspections through the National Bridge Inspection Standards (NBIS)...

Self-Propelled Bridges: Offsite Superstructure Construction Reduces Interruption
August 11, 2015 in Featured , Feature , Bridges
Self-Propelled Bridges: Offsite Superstructure Construction Reduces Interruption

The Wisconsin Department of Transportation (WisDOT) is in the midst of a major project to rebuild the I-94 North-South freeway, one of the state’s most frequently used roadways. The freeway is being widened to eight lanes from the Wisconsin/Illinois border to Milwaukee, with new bridges and interchanges along the full 35-mile stretch. In addition to this freeway work, frontage roads and main arteries are being reconstructed and moved. In total, 17 interchanges are being completely redesigned,...

Connected Traffic—Learning from Smartphones to Develop Smart Cities
August 7, 2015 in Design/Engineering , Featured , Feature
Connected Traffic—Learning from Smartphones to Develop Smart Cities

Back in the waning years of the 19th century, two innovative inventions were beginning their revolutionary paths to change the world. Telephones were just becoming available, and they brought with them the promise of instant and direct voice communication. Meanwhile, growing urban density and horse-drawn traffic created the need for safety and standards to keep streets safe, and the traffic signal was born. Despite not having much in common on the surface, telephony and traffic signals follow...

Intelligent Models for Roadways—A New Way to Work
August 7, 2015 in Featured , Feature
Intelligent Models for Roadways—A New Way to Work

Headquartered in Denmark, with approximately 6,000 employees worldwide and offices in 24 countries on four continents, COWI is a consultancy company servicing engineering, environmental-science and economics disciplines that has carried out more than 45,000 projects in 175 countries. COWI Norway, with 1,200 employees, is one of the country’s largest consultancy firms, and clients expect the firm to deliver large, complex projects, as it has has specialists in almost every engineering discipli...

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Stormwater Interview with Robert Page, P.E., Vice President, HNTB

Stormwater Interview with Robert Page, P.E., Vice President, HNTB

Santa Barbara County North Branch Jail Expansion

Santa Barbara County North Branch Jail Expansion

February Issue 2026

February Issue 2026