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A Celebration of Civil Engineering Projects in Maryland

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Iron Bridge Blown Up 9 Times in Civil War. Three Bridges Destroyed by Floods ... Headquarters in Union Bridge - National Register of Historic Places ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: A Celebration of Civil Engineering Projects in Maryland


1
A Celebration of Civil Engineering Projects in
Maryland
  • ASCEs 150th Anniversary Celebration
  • September 13, 2002

2
Our Civil Engineering History in Maryland
3
Civil Engineering in MD
Great to be a Civil Engineer in Maryland Just
look at what WE have done!
4
Civil Engineering in MD
  • Railroads
  • Dams and Canals
  • Bridges and Tunnels
  • Buildings and Structures
  • Transit
  • Highways

5
Railroads in Maryland
  • First US Railroads
  • Baltimore Ohio RR
  • Railroad Structures that set the standards

6
Carrollton Viaduct
  • 11,000 Blocks of Granite Used
  • Length312 feet
  • Height60 feet
  • Width26 feet
  • Clearance over water51 ft. 9 in.
  • Worlds Oldest RR Bridge Still in Use.
  • First Bridge of the BO RR Completed in 1829
  • Designated Historic Civil Engineering Landmark in
    1982

7
Thomas Viaduct
  • Begun in 1832, Viaduct was first train bridge
    built on Curve
  • Named after 1st BO RR President, Philip E. Thomas
  • Benjamin F. Latrobe, Jr., 19th Century Chief
    Engineer of BO RR, designed stone arch
  • Belief would not support weight of loaded train
  • 1964 Named National Historic Landmark
  • Span612, Height60
  • 24,000 cy of Granite
  • Opened July 4th, 1835
  • Cost 150,000

8
Bollman Truss Bridge and Savage Mill
  • In 1822, John Savage, a Philadelphia Merchant,
    chartered Savage Manufacturing Company and opened
    a cotton mill on Patuxent River
  • Oldest surviving Bollman Style, Iron RR Bridge in
    US
  • 80 foot long iron truss bridge
  • Designed by Wendell Bollman
  • Built in 1869
  • Mill Operated until 1947
  • Mill and Bridge are on National Register of
    Historic Landmarks

9
BO Railroad Museum
  • On July 4, 1828, Charles Carroll of Carrollton
    laid cornerstone of BO railroad.
  • RR era began in US on May 22, 1830 - first run
    left Mt. Clare Station.
  • Located in Mt. Clare shops
  • First RR station of BO and in US
  • Worlds largest RR Museum
  • 36-Acre Site has first mile of RR in US

10
Harpers Ferry Rail Trestle
  • Harpers Ferry RR Bridges Did Not Fare Well
  • In 19th Century, Two Wooden Bridges Collapsed
  • Iron Bridge Blown Up 9 Times in Civil War
  • Three Bridges Destroyed by Floods
  • Existing Bridge is 1894 Steel Bridge
  • 3 Pratt Trusses
  • 6 Plate Girders
  • Length137 ft.
  • Today, footbridge along rail for Appalachian
    Trail

11
Western Maryland Railroad
  • 1852, RR Crept into Western Maryland
  • Originally known as Baltimore, Carroll and
    Frederick RR
  • Mainly a freight line
  • Took over Gettysburg RR (rode on by Lincoln on
    day of historic speech)
  • 1927 - became subsidiary of BO RR
  • Headquarters in Union Bridge - National Register
    of Historic Places

12
Dams Canals in Maryland
  • Dams for Baltimores Reservoirs and Hydroelectric
    Power
  • Canals for Transporting Goods

13
Lake Roland Dam and Gatehouse
  • 1861 - Lake Roland, Baltimores First Municipal
    Water Supply
  • Water Tunnels controlled by Greek Revival
    gatehouse
  • 50 years of operation plagued by watershed
    erosion pollution
  • 112k to excavate
  • 152k to build
  • 225 ft above mean tide
  • Width60, Height40
  • Renovated in 80s
  • Now a Park

14
Druid Lake Dam
  • Completed 1871
  • Height 119 feet
  • Reservoir added 429 million gallons to system
  • Forerunner of large earthfill dams
  • ASCE Designated National Historic Civil
    Engineering Landmark - 1971

15
Baltimores Water Supply
  • Baltimore City Bureau of Water and Wastewater
    supplies drinking water to 1.6 million people
  • Two sources Gunpowder Falls
  • North Branch of Patapsco River
  • 3 concrete gravity dams Liberty,
  • Patapsco Prettyboy and Loch Raven
  • 12 tunnel conveys to Montebello Filtration Plant
  • 10 tunnel conveys to Ashburton from Liberty Dam
  • 480 million gallons treated per day and
    distributed through 3,000 miles of water mains

16
Conowingo Dam
  • Near the mouth, Susquehanna River Drops off 90
    feet
  • 1926, Philadelphia Electric Co. began
    construction
  • US 1 Crosses Susquehanna on top of dam
  • Susquehanna Electric Co. creates 2 billion
    KW-hr/year
  • Length 1 mile
  • Height 105 feet
  • Capacity 512,000 kilowatts
  • 11 generators
  • Materials 700,000 cy of concrete

17
Chesapeake and Ohio Canal
  • George Washington chartered Patowmack to extend
    navigatibility
  • Began in Georgetown on July 4, 1828
  • Reached Cumberland by 1850
  • Disastrous flood in 1924
  • Length 184.5 miles
  • Rise 600 feet
  • 74 liftlocks, over 165 culverts, 11 aqueducts
  • Cost was 11 million
  • Paw Paw tunnel 3,118

18
Chesapeake and Delaware Canal
  • Began construction in 1824
  • Reduced route between Balto. Phila. by 300
    miles
  • Between 1921 1927 converted to sea-level canal
    by eliminating locks
  • Length 14 miles
  • Width 450 feet
  • Depth 35 feet
  • Cost 2.25 million

19
Bridges Tunnels in Maryland
  • Moving Transportation Along East Coast
  • Spanning Major Rivers

20
Thomas J. Hatem Memorial Bridge
  • Opened in 1940, MdTAs Oldest Facility
  • Replaced 2 lane, double decked RR bridge
  • Original crossing known as Gold Mine
  • Bought by State in 1923 converted to double
    deck bridge
  • Length 1.5 miles Span 1.4 miles
  • Height 89 feet
  • Width 46 ft (4 lanes)
  • Cost 4.8 million

21
Governor Harry W. Nice Memorial Bridge
  • Franklin D. Roosevelt participated in
    groundbreaking in 1939
  • Opened 1940 at cost of 5 million
  • Completed US 301 in MD and VA
  • Length 1.7 miles 29 spans
  • Rehab in 1986, cost 17.5m
  • 5.6 million vehicles in FY01
  • Height 135 feet

22
Bay Bridge(William Preston Lane, Jr. Memorial
Bridge)
  • Opened in 1952 second span opened in 1973
  • 4.3 mile length third longest bridge in world
    in 52
  • Replaced 40 minute ferry trip
  • 23.9 million vehicles crossed bridge
  • Worlds largest continuous over-water steel
    structure in world
  • Cost45 m in 52
  • Cost148 m in 73
  • Height 186 feet
  • Towers 354 feet
  • Main span2,922 ft.

23
Woodrow Wilson Bridge
  • 6 Lane, 90 feet wide, opened in 61
  • Length 5,900 Draw span 212
  • Height above water 50 feet
  • Average daily traffic 200,000 vehicles
  • 8-lane beltway bottlenecks at 6 lane bridge
  • Proposed bridge and interchanges 2.44 billion
  • Height above water, 70 feet
  • 8 general lanes, 2 merge diverge lanes 2
    transit/HOV
  • Current 260 openings 65

24
Francis Scott Key Bridge
  • Final link in I-695, opened in 1977
  • Second longest continuous truss in US
  • Main span length 1,200 feet, height 185 feet
  • 11 million vehicles used bridge in FY 01
  • Height of 36-story building
  • Cost of 141 million

25
US Naval Academy Bridge
  • Design competition selected design
  • Won 1996 FHWA Excellence in Highway Design
    Award
  • Replaced 1920s drawbridge
  • Length 2,700
  • Width 54
  • Cost 34 million

26
The Baltimore Harbor Tunnel
  • Opened in Nov. 1957 longest twin tube trench
    type tunnel in world at the time
  • Opening enabled motorists to avoid 50 signals
  • Length 1.7 miles two tubes 4 lanes
  • Cost 144 million
  • Depth 101 feet
  • Designated I-895

27
Fort McHenry (I-95) Tunnel
  • Opened on Nov. 23 1985 final link in I-95
  • Worlds largest submerged tube tunnel for
    vehicular traffic
  • Largest interstate project until Central Artery
  • 8 lanes on vertical and horizontal curves
  • Length 8,800 feet, 32 tubes
  • Cost 825 million

28
Buildings and Structures
  • Structures Creating Our History

29
Maryland State House (Annapolis)
  • Construction begun in 1772
  • 1779 Legislature met there first time
  • Nov. 1783 to Aug. 1784 Doubled as Capitol of
    the US
  • Treaty of Paris signed here, ending Revolutionary
    War
  • Dome height 121, diameter 40
  • Oldest State House still in continuous
  • legislative use

30
Baltimore City Hall
  • Construction begun in 1867
  • First commission of 22 year old architect, George
    E. Frederick
  • 2nd empire style, Baroque revival
  • Segmented dome capping building designed by
    Baltimore engineer, Wendell Bollman
  • Original constructon costs 200,000
  • 1977 renovations - 10 million

31
The Power Plant (Inner Harbor)
  • Opened in 1899 in stages through 1909
  • Originally supplied electricity to streetcars
  • 1921 Consolidated Gas and Electric Light and
    Power (BGE) purchased plant
  • Generated steam heat to Balto. until 1973
  • City purchased building in 1979
  • 1980s Six Flags urban theme park nightclub
  • 4 smoke stacks 13 in diameter,
  • 192 above water
  • Area 107,000 SF

32
Mount Vernon Place Church
  • Built on site of Charles Howard Mansion, site
    where Francis Scott Key died
  • Finished November 12, 1872
  • National Register of Historic Places
  • Gothic design, only 1 of 3 in Balto.
  • Mount Vernon United Methodist
  • Seats 900 with hand carved pews
  • Green serpentine, grey stone
  • sandstone exterior
  • Steeple is 12 inches below
  • Washington Monument
  • Original cost 400,000

33
The Shot Tower
  • Built in 1828 on corner of Fallsway Fayette St.
  • Phoenix Shot Tower Co. constructed w/o
    scaffolding
  • Charles Carroll of Carrollton laid the corner
    stone
  • Molten balls of lead dropped from top formed
    balls
  • Merchants Shot Tower Co. manufactured until 1894
  • 1921-Union Oil purchased it to tear it down
    build gas station but given to city in 1924
  • 1.1 million bricks
  • Restored in 1976
  • Height215, 4.5 walls at street
  • Depth underground 17

34
Fort McHenry
  • Earthen fort constructed in 1778 to defend harbor
    during revolution
  • Jean Focin designed reconstruction in 1802
  • Named after James McHenry, Secretary of War
  • Attacked Sept. 13, 1814 by British fleet
  • View of bombardment inspired Star Spangled Banner
  • 1925 designated a National Monument
  • 1939 - became historic shrine
  • Allowed to fly flag 24 hrs.

35
Mass Transit in Maryland
  • Moving People Efficiently

36
Streetcar Museum (Falls Road)
  • Through 1940s, 1,000 streetcars criss-crossed
    city on 25 routes and over 300 miles of track
  • Houses Brownell Car from 1898
  • Buses began replacing streetcars in 1930s
  • WWII saw resurgence in streetcars (rationing)
  • Last streetcar ran on November 3, 1963
  • Located on Falls Road near North Avenue

37
Mass Transit in Maryland
  • In 1963, streetcars gave way to buses
  • Metro plan drawn up in 1965 with version of
    original plan adopted in 1971
  • Baltimore Metro opened in 1983 costing 1.4
    billion
  • Light rail opened in 1992 1997 costing 460 m
  • Metro extended to Hopkins (total system15.5
    miles)
  • 14 stations, 49,000 riders daily
  • Light rail extended to BWI (total system30
    miles)
  • 33 stations 30,000 daily riders



38
Highways in Maryland
  • Moving People in Motor Vehicles

39
National Road (US 40)
  • Began in Cumberland
  • Federal Highway System began with
  • construction of National Road in 1811
  • Ownership transferred to states in 1834
  • Reached end in 1839 in Vandalia, Illinois
  • First tollbooth in MD was the La Vale Tollhouse
    (only tollhouse still standing)
  • 16,000 lane miles
  • 600 miles long
  • 2,000 bridges
  • Cost 6,824,919

40
Sideling Hill (I-68)
  • Part of I-68 construction in 1980s
  • Remove hairpin curve in US 40
  • Cost 20 million
  • Depth 340, length 810
  • 5.2 million lbs. of explosives
  • Exhibit center on west
  • 4.5 million CY (10 million
  • tons) of rock excavated
  • 16 months to excavate

41
Other Notable Highway Projects
  • Baltimore Beltway
  • Capital Beltway
  • I-95 and John F. Kennedy Memorial Highway
  • I-270
  • I-70

42
Civil Engineering in MD
These are just samples of what we have done! Even
more exciting, what will we being doing in the
future!
43
Civil Engineerings Future
  • John D. Porcari
  • Secretary of Transportation Past 4 Years
  • Deputy Secretary of Transportation Prior
  • Ushered in Smart Growth
  • Overseeing 1.8 billion BWI Expansion
  • Overseeing MDOTs largest Transportation Program

44
Civil Engineerings Future in Maryland
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