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Flatiron projects win awards for design and construction

Flatiron, one of the largest bridge and infrastructure contractors in the U.S., has been recognized with eight industry awards for infrastructure projects, including the Best Overall Award from the Design-Build Institute of America for rebuilding the new I-35W Bridge in Minneapolis after the old bridge collapsed in 2007. The I-35W Bridge project, recipient of more than 20 industry awards to date, was again recognized with the Design-Build Institute of America's Best Overall Award, beating twelve other nationally recognized projects, during an awards ceremony at the 2009 Design-Build Conference on November 6 in Washington D.C.

The I-35W project team, which included the Federal Highway Administration, the Minnesota Department of Transportation, Flatiron, Manson Construction Company and Figg Bridge Engineers, was also recognized with the prestigious David Schulz Award given by Northwestern University's Infrastructure Technology Institute.

The project also won the 2009 America's Transportation Awards Grand Prize winner, given by the American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials. The ten projects that scored the highest during four regional contests competed for the Grand Prize.

As Flatiron's third project to win an American Public Works Association Project of the Year Award in 2009, the Lake Hodges Bicycle/Pedestrian Bridge in San Diego, Calif., was recognized for its unusual design and construction methods. At 990 feet long, it is the longest stress-ribbon bridge in the world and the sixth bridge of its kind in the United States.

This project also recently received the Precast/Prestressed Concrete Institute's Design Award for "versatility of precast concrete systems and the innovative ways in which designers continue to leverage the advantages of precast concrete to meet real-world design requirements, " according to James G. Toscas, P.E., PCI president.

In Los Gatos, Calif., the Lenihan Dam Outlet project was selected to receive the American Society of Civil Engineers 2009 Outstanding Project award from the San Francisco Section. This two-year project required construction of a new 2, 000-foot tunnel to house a 54-inch-diameter outlet pipe. The award was presented during the Annual Meeting on September 25 in Burlingame, Calif.



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