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Canal
Authority Seeks New Canal Crossing
by C.J. Schexnayder
January 20, 2010
The
Panama Canal Authority is planning a permanent road connecting
North and South American land masses on the canal's Atlantic
side.
In the next few weeks, officials with the agency, known by
its Spanish acronym ACP, plan to award a feasibility contract
for possible alternatives for a permanent vehicular crossing
at the Gatun Locks near Colon. Preliminary plans call for
either a bridge or tunnel.
Currently, traffic must use a small road that runs directly
in front of the locks. The arrangement requires that the only
road crossing at that end of the canal must be closed when
the locks are open for ships. This essentially cuts off one
side of the isthmus from the other.
The route will become impassible when work begins on the new
locks, which are part of the massive $5.2-billion Third Lane
Expansion Project.
The ACP wants a permanent replacement road that will not
interrupt canal operations. The project is separate from the
Third Lane Expansion Project, says Jorge L. Quijano, ACP executive
vice president of engineering and program management. "We
have to make sure there is a component for a continuous connection
across that area throughout the construction of the locks,"
he says.
At present, the two permanent roads linking the North and
South American land masses are both at the Pacific end of
the canal. The Bridge of the Americas at the mouth of the
waterway was completed in 1962 at a cost of $20 million, and
the $120-million Centennial Bridge at the Galliard Cut opened
in 2004.
After the contract is awarded, the selected contractor will
have seven months to present the studies.
http://enr.ecnext.com/coms2/article_intr100120PanamaCanal
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