The kids would have a blast sliding down the south end zone hill now.......
For the last few days they were using those small bob cats, to do the leveling and right grading. They had to bring in the heavy bulldozer to do the job. They had, for a better word, some automatic leveling device on the blade to lift and lower the blade to the right level. I watched them do the work for about a half hour. You could tell it was doing the job and fast...The job master there said that the next step, after the grade was right, was to lay in the mud slab, which is if I understand right is a thin layer of cement soil. After that they would start on the bottom with rebar and forms to pour each row and work there way up.....no engineer here, but that's what I understand....He also stated that the work on the Athletic building would start sometime in the next couple of months. That's from his mouth. I am only passing it own......
Rain or no rain, they are working this morning....
They would not break ground unless they knew they could proceed, uninterrupted to completion. It would be too much of a risk even with a mud bed. I hope the weather we are expecting Saturday into Sunday does not cause any serious problems. This is a very vulnerable time for the project right now. If they would have been able to place the mud bed I would feel more comfortable. Fortunately they won't have any standing water. Looks like a good weather all of next week. It will be all good if we can see a mud bed by next Friday. . These next two weeks will be the controlling time for the critical path. We get rain...... we could be in trouble.
From what I understand the seating package is finished and they have bids. Don't know if they have decided on a vendor though. That is the last thing for the actual stadium work so the stadium should be in good shape for August 30 opening day. (if the weather cooperates in the next two weeks)
I do think it will be tight on the rest room/ concession stand building though. They just finished those plans on the 14th of March. If they can break ground in May on that phase they should be OK. I would start to get concerned if we don't see work on that phase by the end of May. That is only three months from start to finish. I suspect they have no wiggle room on the critical path on that portion of the project.
The Ace in the hole is that they can always turn on the lights and run two shifts. Keep in mind, large concrete placements always start at about 2 or 3 in the morning. Doing one row at a time is no big deal and they can knock out a placement like that in a few hours.
Lets hope for good weather these next two weeks.
----Take the banana out of your butt and think of some posts as having an obvious jest to them--------So indirectly I was hinting at Helmut to see what types of construction would be used to avoid any "cave ins"----BTW this post was one with an obvious jest to it!!!
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