✕
Plans to increase commercial vehicle inspection capacity at the land port of entry along the Mexican border in Douglas, Arizona, are moving forward as the US General Services Administration awarded a design-build contract of $274.7 million to Hensel Phelps Construction Co. port near an existing US Customs and Border Protection facility.
The planned 80-acre facility would increase the number of commercial vehicle inspection lanes from one to four and the number of commercial inspection docks from 12 to 36, compared to the current port of entry ground from Raul Hector Castro to Douglas, according to GSA. It would also be large enough to accommodate large mining rigs, too large for the existing port.
Hensel Phelps, with a team that also includes Jones Studio and Stantec, beat out two other finalist design teams for the job, GSA procurement records show. The other shortlisted teams were Caddell-AISI, a joint venture, and William Charles Construction and Wilson & Co. Engineers and Architects.
Construction is scheduled to begin next fall and be completed by fall 2028.
GSA also selected the contractor this summer for the expansion and modernization of the Calexico West land port of entry in California.
GSA is funding the Arizona work with $180.3 million from the Jobs and Infrastructure Investment Act of 2021, which includes $3.4 billion to build and modernize land ports of entry, along with 92, $2 billion from the Inflation Reduction Act of 2022, which set aside another $3.4 billion to use low-content. carbon building materials and making federal facilities more sustainable.
The project is part of the “two-port solution” to solve problems with the Castro Land port of entry about 4.5 miles away. This 4.8-acre facility was originally built in 1933 and expanded in 1993, but GSA officials say all inbound and outbound trucks must use the same vehicle inspection compound smaller commercial ones, slowing down traffic.
Although all commercial operations would take place at the new port, passenger vehicles, pedestrians, cyclists and buses would continue to use the Castro Land port of entry. GSA also plans to expand and modernize this port separately.
GSA expects to award an independent design-build contract for the rehabilitation of the Castro Land Port of Entry in the fall of 2027. Work is scheduled to begin the following year and be completed in 2031.
By James Leggate
Bally’s Unveils Plans for $1.5 Million Athletics Complex Development in Las Vegas
Newly released documents indicate Bally’s is planning a three-phase development of the site and will add an integrated complex.
Image courtesy of Clark County Nevada
Click on the image for more details
Preliminary planning documents from Clark County, Nevada, give a look at what Bally’s Corp. is considering building as part of a baseball-focused redevelopment at the site of the former Tropicana hotel and casino in Las Vegas.
The casino owner plans to build a $1.5 billion stadium for MLB athletics as the team relocates from Oakland, California. A joint venture of Mortenson Construction and McCarthy Building Cos. is already underway as a construction manager.
The newly released documents, which do not show finalized designs, indicate that Bally’s is planning a three-phase development of the site to add an integrated complex. In addition to the 290-foot-tall 30,000-seat domed stadium, Phase 1 would include a 495-foot-tall casino and hotel tower and a 1.8 million-foot parking structure squares Phase 2 would add a second 495-foot hotel tower and another 150,000-square-foot parking structure. Phase 3 would include a 495-foot-tall third hotel separate from the other towers.
The Athletics have said they hope to begin construction on the stadium next year.
By James Leggate
New Mexico recognized for reclaiming old coal mine site
The New Mexico Division of Mines and Minerals’ restoration of a former coal mine site, abandoned for nearly a century, was recognized by the federal Office of Surface Mine Reclamation and Enforcement with the Prize for the Recovery of Abandoned Mining Lands.
According to the state of New Mexico, the project stemmed from runoff from two piles of coal waste that were eroding a nearby road and threatening to pollute an adjacent stream. The project installed terraces made of straw bales and planted seedlings. This configuration is expected to improve water quality, enhance the landscape, and create safe recreational opportunities.