on top of the pillar, there are 2 levels of concrete the wood seems to show that clearly
big gap between pieces, and a hell of a crack forming on the bottom
This rail project was supposed to benefit residents and tourists on Oahu from Kapolei to the Ala Moana Mall. Basically the South side of the island.
I'm thinking it's a fast build to get it to where it's too far past the point of not return, and then it is cheaper to fix and finish than to demolish. Contactor is not going to get good PR for this
Found on https://www.facebook.com/theframeman
http://khon2.com/2015/02/07/schedule-of-lane-closures-due-to-rail-transit-project-work-feb-7-13/
that looks haphazard to me.
The state financial study, publicly released on December 2, 2010, indicated that the project would likely experience a $1.7 billion overrun above the $5.3 billion projected cost, and that collections from the General Excise Tax would be 30% below forecasts.
On October 21, 2009, the city announced Kiewit Pacific Co. had won the $483 million contract to build the first two stages of the line
On August 14, 2014, the Honolulu Authority for Rapid Transportation (HART) unsealed bids for the first nine rail transit stations. The bids ranged from $294.5 to $320.8 million versus HART's budget of $184 million
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Honolulu_Rail_Transit
This rail idea has been around for 40 years. Never was worked out. It would have prevented the daily traffic jam on the H1 for the past 30 years
The initial Honolulu rail line is proposed to run about 20 miles from East Kapolei, near the University of Hawaii-West Oahu campus, to Ala Moana Center. Along the way, it would pass Waipahu, Leeward Community College, Pearl City, Pearlridge, Aloha Stadium, Salt Lake, Kalihi, Honolulu Community College, downtown Honolulu and Kakaako. Extensions are also planned. One extension would go from Ala Moana Center to the University of Hawaii-Manoa campus, as well as Waikiki.
More than 60 percent of Oahu's population and 80 percent of its employment is located in the designated transit corridor.
http://www.civilbeat.com/topics/honolulu-rail-project/
AnsaldoBreda and AnsaldoSTS, which together form Ansaldo Honolulu JV, were facing a deluge of bad press for shoddy construction and broken contractual promises from Buffalo, New York, to Gothenburg, Sweden.
Honolulu is basing it’s driverless rail system on the Copenhagen Metro, and Ansaldo has a production facility in Pittsburg, where the rail cars will be assembled.
http://www.civilbeat.com/2015/03/frequent-fliers-nearly-500k-spent-on-rail-travel-to-date/
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