LOW BIDS
Bothar, Grace, Callanan, Paul Scariano, A. Servidone Win NYSDOT Project Bids
ALBANY—The New York State Department of Transportation recently announced the selection of five apparent low bidders for work in the Hudson Valley/New York City regions.
Bothar Construction LLC of Binghamton, NY was the lowest of three bidders at $2,924,822.90 for highway-resurfacing on Route 52 and 55 in the Village of Liberty in Sullivan County.
Grace Industries LLC of Melville, NY was the lowest of three bidders at $32,377,765.50 for highway-pavement on I-287 in the villages of Harrison, Port Chester, Rye Brook and the towns of Rye, Harrison and cities of White Plains and Rye in Westchester County.
Paul J. Scariano Inc. of New Rochelle, NY was the lowest of eight bidders at $14,885,000.00 for safety and mobility improvements along the Grand Central Parkway, 907M and Long Island Expressway/I-495 in Queens County.
A Servidone/B Anthony Const. JV of Castleton, NY was the lowest of seven bidders at $26,316,909.00 for drainage, median barrier and wall improvements along Route 9W in the towns of Cornwall and Highlands and the Village of Cornwall-On-Hudson in Orange County.
Callanan Industries Inc. of Albany, NY was the lower of two bidders at $3,894,015.00 for pavement-reconstruction along I-84 in the towns of Greenville, Montgomery, Wallkill and Wawayanda in Orange County.
Mace Lands Westchester DPW Jobs
WHITE PLAINS—The Westchester County Department of Public Works recently announced the selection of two apparent low bidders for work at county facilities.
Mace Contracting Corp. of New Rochelle, NY was the lowest of four bidders at $5,138,000.00 for rehabilitation of Cove Road and Edgewater Point Pumping stations in the Mamaroneck Sanitary Sewer District in Mamaroneck, NY.
Mace Contracting Corp. of New Rochelle, NY was the lowest of six bidders at $34,874,750.00 for parking garage rehabilitation-Phase II at the Michaelian Office Building in the City of White Plains.
DOT Awards $17.4M to Rehab Bridges In Orange, Rockland, Westchester
ALBANY—New York State officials announced recently that work is underway on a $17.4-million project to rehabilitate three highway bridges in the lower Hudson Valley.
With support from the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act, the project will install new decks, road surfaces and make other repairs to bridges along State Route 52 in Orange County, State Route 304 in Rockland County and Illington Road in Westchester County, which serve thousands of motorists each day and are widely used by commuters to reach the region’s major highways. The bridges being rehabilitated are all more than 50 years old.
The rehabilitations are designed to ease the congested travel motorists now experience through these busy travel corridors. Project work on the bridges includes the installation of new, fully continuous and jointless bridge decks that will reduce long-term maintenance costs and create a smoother ride. These are also designed to increase the overall life span of the bridges. New road surfaces, steel girder repairs, pier replacements, concrete abutment repairs and utility work are also planned.
Warm mix asphalt with recycled crushed glass will also be used and other materials onsite will be recycled and reused as applicable, DOT reported. The contractor on the project is OCS Industries Inc. of Poughkeepsie, NY.
The bridges to be rehabilitated are: State Route 52 over Interstate 84 in the Town of Newburgh, Orange County, which was originally built in 1963; State Route 304 over Interstate 287 in the Town of Clarkstown, Rockland County, which was originally built in 1953; and Illington Road over the Taconic State Parkway in the Town of Yorktown in Westchester, a span built in 1967.
New York State DOT officials noted that work has already begun on the State Route 52 and Illington Road bridges. Construction will get started on the State Route 304 bridge in the coming months. The project is expected to be completed by the Summer 2026.
Shoulder closures will occur along Interstate 84, the Taconic State Parkway and Interstate 287 to accommodate construction. Additional traffic changes include State Route 52 and State Route 304 will be reduced to one lane in each direction, while the Illington Road overpass will be closed to traffic.