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Archive of entries posted on April 2010

Union Station Project Update #6

I’m sure much of Kiewit’s effort to keep the job site clean and environmentally sound is governed by regulation.  However, it feels like they may be going beyond simple compliance with rules.  In fact, I sense a compulsion for neatness and cleanliness.  Here are some of my observations over the past couple of weeks and learning from my meeting this morning with Hunter Sydnor who is Kiewit’s Public Information Officer.

Scrap materials are sorted by type and recycled.  In this picture, you can see four of the seven dumpsters containing materials headed for the recycling plant.

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As you saw in Update #4, the granite sidewalk is being removed along 16th Street and is being stacked on pallets.  Each stone has been labeled with the “address” of its place in the sidewalk.  As of this morning, nearly all of the granite, along with the familiar flower pots, trash cans and benches have been staged for removal to a nearby staging area.  They will be stored until that part of 16th Street is reassembled using the same granite slabs in a couple of years or so.

Controlling dust appears to be a top priority.  This street sweeper runs constantly for nine hours day up and down the two remaining blocks of Chestnut Street, one block of 18th Street, and three blocks of Wewatta Street.  The goal is to pick up dirt left behind by the departing dump trucks.  On Friday, I was walking on 18th Street, approaching  the new Union Gateway Bridge when I saw a Kiewit employee with a broom sweeping a sidewalk where nobody walks, on a street where nobody drives.  But the wind would find the dirt and blow it around the neighborhood if he hadn’t swept it.

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Similarly, this yellow truck sprays water on the open dirt areas of the project to keep dust from blowing. On a windy day last week, I noticed construction workers shielding theirs eyes from a passing dirt devil.  The spray truck on was the spot within a minute.  Even with construction at a complete standstill over the Easter weekend, the spray truck was at work each day keeping the neighborhood free of dust.

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In blog #3 about water systems, I mentioned that 10 dewatering wells pump ground water into the storm sewer.  Here’s a picture of the filtration tanks that ensure the water is clean before it heads for the river.

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Since this is a transportation project, it is unconventional from the perspective of LEED Certification which is oriented to upright building structures.  In spite of that, the Kiewit Western Construction Company is attempting to gain LEED Certification for its work at Union Station with help from its sister organization, the Kiewit Building Group (commerical buildings) which also has an office in Denver.  Much of what I mentioned above is part of that effort.

I promised an answer to your questions about bad dirt.  I can tell you that the dirt is contaminated with coal dust.  No surprise, since the area was a rail yard for well over 100 years.  I still do not know exactly what is being done with the dirt, but I will work to find out.

Finally, I’ll share my favorite cleanliness story to date.  On the same windy day that I mentioned above, a worker climbed out of his front-end loader just as a piece of litter blew past his leg.  The wind carried it for 30-40 feet with him in hot pursuit.  He picked it up, stuffed it in his pocket, and went on his way … to lunch, I think.


Denver 1996

I really wanted to keep my photo-every-twelve-years streak alive, so I looked through my photo albums but couldn’t find a Central Platte Valley photo from 1997. Sorry. However, I did find this one I took from I-25 and 23rd Avenue during the summer of 1996. Close enough?

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What’s interesting is how immature Elitch Gardens looks. Elitch’s opened in the CPV in May 1995 so at this point the new Elitch’s was only a year old. Coors Field is visible on the left edge of the photo, but there’s no Pepsi Center yet. That wouldn’t break ground until November 1997. In the foreground, Colorado Ocean Journey (now the Downtown Aquarium) had not yet broken ground either. That wouldn’t happen until April 1997.

No new development had occurred yet behind Union Station. It would be three more years before construction on Commons Park would begin. There’s one building in this view that isn’t there anymore and I totally do not remember it at all. It is the dark gable-roofed building immediately behind the blond-brick Postal Annex building, at approximately the location of the Gates building today. It was fairly tall—the peak of its roof is about the same height as the top of the Postal Annex, approximately 60 feet. Does anyone remember anything about that building?

If we were to do another 12 years, that would put us at 2008/2009, which is basically what we have today, so I won’t bother. But you could always peruse the DenverInfill Blog archives for photos of the Central Platte Valley and Auraria from those years. I’m sure you’ll find a few.


Denver 1985

Last week I shared with you two of my favorite photos of the west side of Downtown Denver, one from 1961 and the other, twelve years later, from 1973. Today I have two photos from 1985—another 12 year jump into the future. Unlike the first two, these two photos were taken by me.

I moved to Denver in July 1985 and on one of my first trips to Downtown, my friends and I managed to sneak onto the top 56th floor of Republic Plaza, Denver’s tallest skyscraper (the building was about one year old at the time). The 56th floor was completely unoccupied and was just the core and shell; it was a single open room covering the entire floor offering fantastic views in every direction. Fortunately, I had my Kodak 110 Instamatic with me, and so here are two of the photos I took.

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This first one is taken in the same general direction as the 1961 photo, although aimed above Downtown buildings in the foreground. The Auraria Campus was just nine years old and none of the West Campus buildings had been built yet. This shot gives you a nice view of the Larimer and Lawrence Street viaducts. However, if you look closely one block to the right of the Larimer Street viaduct in the Walnut Street right-of-way, out by the industrial buildings you can see several sets of concrete piers that get shorter as they get closer to Downtown. That is the Auraria Parkway off-ramp from I-25 under construction. It doesn’t look like construction had begun yet on any of the at-grade portions of Auraria Parkway, which does a one-block jog, transitioning from a Walnut to Wazee alignment, between 5th and 9th Streets. In the far bottom right corner of the photo is the intersection of what was then Wazee and 9th Street, with the orange-brick historic building where Brooklyn’s is now located on one corner, and the Auraria Campus tennis courts (which were replaced a few years ago with the Metro State College parking garage) on the other corner.

The photo also provides a nice view of the original Mile High Stadium, and McNichols Arena. Just like in the 1961 photo, you can clearly see Lake Middle School and its bell tower next to Sloans Lake off in the distance.

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This second photo shows the Central Platte Valley behind Union Station. Just right of center is the old 20th Street viaduct (with billboards!) heading off into Lower Highland. One block to the left is 19th Street. About the only building still standing along 19th that appears in this photo is the small yellow building (the Xcel Steam Plant) at 19th and Delgany (now Wewatta). Visible in between the Tabor One and 1225 17th Street towers is Union Station with, behind it, rail yards and a huge industrial/warehouse building where the Glass House and Commons Park is today. On the left edge of the photo is a long horizontal industrial building where Little Raven Street now intersects with 15th Street.

Up next: Denver 1997-ish


Union Station Project Update #5

It appears that more dump trucks have been called into service earlier this week to speed up the digging process or to catch up from three lost days last week. On Tuesday morning at about 7:30, there were 31 dump trucks queued up to haul dirt from the bus box.  I could not get the line of trucks in one photo so  here is a  28 second video from my friend Carol of the parade of trucks.

It doesn’t take long to fill those trucks and send them on their way. To do the job, Kiewit uses a John Deere 450C LC excavator (if you are into specs, check this out). Three scoops from its giant bucket and a truck is full.

The excavator gets help from a Caterpillar D8T bulldozer (50 second video here demonstrates its size). It pushes dirt from the floor of the bus box to within reach of the excavator. In the photo below, notice the slit of yellow above the blue pipes and below the excavator.  That’s the roof of the dozer working in the bus box hole.  I took the photo from the light rail platform while standing on bench across Wewatta Street.

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By the way, on Monday the dozer got stuck in the bottom of the hole. Another excavator came to the rescue and dug it out. The wet ground from last week’s snow storm probably contributed to the problem.

Since some components of the dewatering system are still being installed, I believe (unconfirmed) that Kiewit is not yet digging the bus box hole to its eventual depth of 28 feet. I’d say they are currently digging to a depth of about 15 feet.  The top layer of dirt is contaminated (not toxic) so they are disposing of it off site. The deeper, cleaner dirt will be recycled on site and used for backfill around the completed bus box. In the meantime, the top layer of dirt is being hauled away at an incredible pace. You can see the progress from Tuesday to today in these two photos.

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