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Higher ground
LA 10 gets straighter, higher,
wider near Clinton
By Sam Barnes
A section of LA 10 is being shifted to the north and a higher
and straighter embankment constructed to alleviate a flooding
problem near Clinton. The low spot, which straddles the city
limits of Clinton, is being raised with a new asphalt road
and shoulders.
Denton-James Construction of Baton Rouge should finish the
$13.3 million project in March.
"The first step after breaking ground in August was
to get the fill into that 1-mi. bottom so we could work on
the bridges," said project manager Gerald Denley.
The highway will eventually be topped with about 10 in. of
asphalt of base, binder and wearing courses. Outside the city,
another 4.5 mi. of existing road will get new shoulders and
be milled and overlaid.
"After existing utilities were moved out of the way
we placed about 380,000 cu. yds. of fill from two borrow pits,"
Denley said. "That allowed us to begin work on the bridges.
We wanted to get all of that started before the winter rains."
The new road embankment was raised anywhere from 5 to 10
ft., depending on the location. At the same time, Gulf South
Piling & Construction Inc. of Jefferson drove 55- to 75-ft.-long
precast piles as support for two bridges that cross Pretty
Creek and the Comite River.
"There are several bridges that go through that bottom,
including two girder-span bridges that cross the rivers and
three flat-span bridges that cross small tributaries that
feed into the rivers," Denley said. The 10-span Pretty
Creek bridge is the longest.
He added that value engineering helped shave time off the
bridge phase.
"We re-designed the job - we were originally to build
the bridges in two phases, but we felt we could do it in one
phase by moving the road over about 10 ft.," Denley said.
"It got us out of the traffic and allowed us to move
nonstop with the construction." A minor problem arose
when stormwater was trapped between the new embankment and
the existing road.
"When it rained there was nowhere for the water to go,
so we installed eight temporary crossdrains beneath the existing
road," he said.
In the spring the Denton-James crew began widening the embankment
on the existing 4.5 mi. of road to build new 10-ft. shoulders
using a "cut and fill" process. A base course of
asphalt will be placed on the shoulders so that traffic can
be moved to the outside.
"That will free up the inside lanes for milling and
paving," Denley said.
Construction Specialists Inc. of Port Allen began paving
the shoulders this summer and should finish the project later
this year.
"There's a little more than 76,000 tons of a Type 8
mix that we'll place out there," said Brent Bergeron,
Construction Specialists president. About 20 to 25 trucks
will deliver about 1,500 to 2,000 tons of asphalt to the site
each day.
A two-silo Astec asphalt plant in Port Allen is producing
the mix.
"Once at the site, the mix will be placed by two Caterpillar
pavers and a RoadTech material transfer vehicle," Bergeron
added.
He said having to place the shoulder asphalt in small widths
under traffic would likely slow progress.
"It'll take some time to get that done," Bergeron
said. "It's not like we're paving 15 ft. wide, rolling
and going. There's a lot of starting and stopping." Several
bridge-tie ins along the existing road will further slow progress.
Only 5 to 6 in. of base is being placed on the shoulders,
with the remaining lifts to be placed once the entire road
is paved. Two 10- to 15-man paving crews will be working at
the peak of construction.
When the shoulders are complete this fall traffic will be
moved to the outside lanes so that the existing lanes can
be milled. The Construction Specialists crews will then place
3 in. of binder and 2 in. of wearing across both the driving
lanes and shoulders.
Bergeron said his crew would then begin work on the new realigned
section of road.
"The only potential delay would be the current shortage
of soil cement," he added. The cement is needed as base
for the new road section.
"We're hoping to start placing cement for the shoulders
in June and start paving in July," said Denley. Traffic
should be moved over to the shoulders by August so that the
milling operation can begin.
Midwest Asphalt of Gainesville, Texas, is milling about 4
to 6 in. of existing asphalt.
"There's a little bit of a profile change to the existing
road to improve drainage," Denley said. "We'll mill
the asphalt, excavate the road to subgrade, cement treat it
and come back with asphalt."
The new road will measure 44 ft. wide, including two 12-ft.
driving lanes and two 10-ft. shoulders.
Other work at the site includes the installation of reinforced
concrete pipe, cross drains and side drains and the dredging
of about 1,500 ft. of Pretty Creek to improve drainage capacity.
"Overton Construction of Livonia is placing the rock
on the slopes and bottom of the creek where we've dredged,"
Denley said.
Useful Source:
For updates on the progress of LA 10, go to: http://www.dotd.state.la.us/construction/baton.html#E%20FELICIANA
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