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Houston Fuel Oil Terminals Expansion: A Massive Project |
How big was the expansion of the Houston Fuel
Oil Terminals dock area? The project,
which involved relocating Barge Dock #1 so
that Deep Water Ship Dock #3 could be built
in its place, consumed nearly 3,000 tons
of steel and about 1,600 wall feet of piling. In other
words, it was massive.
Hammer & Steel was selected as a supplier for the
piling portion of the project through a competitive
bid, according to Clarence Jean Jr., vice president of
Engineering and Construction for Houston Fuel Oil
Terminals. On the project, Hammer & Steel worked
with Bo-Mac Contractors, Ltd., the Beaumont, Texas
based contractor selected to drive the piling.
"We had two different wall systems," explained Jerry
Burton, Bo-Mac's project manager for the Houston
job. "For the deep water dock the contractor
installed a King Pile system (high capacity HZ piling
manufactured by Salzgitter)." The piles were 95 feet
long, and tied back with HP 14x73 battered
steel H piles. Bo-Mac built a template to set the
King Pile. "We set 10 vertical King Piles in it
and drove them to grade. They were driven full penetration," Burton
said. "Then we came back and put in an intermediate
section, a curtain sheet 75 feet long."
"Driving was very difficult, because there is very stiff
clay in the ship dock area," Burton commented.
"The King Piles drove well and the template performed
well-it kept the King Piles in position."
For the barge dock, Bo-Mac installed a range of steel sheet
piling, 85-foot-long Hoesch 3600 sheets and 60-foot-long Hoesch
2500K sheets. "Whenever you put in that much wall, any job
is going to be difficult," Burton said. Work started in November
2000 and took about six months-a rainy period that
had Bo-Mac employees working "up to their elbows in mud."
Doug Picker, of Hammer & Steel's Houston office, coordinated ordering and delivery
of all the steel. "Due to the large quantity and
long lengths, there wasn't a good location to receive and store the steel at
the job site," Burton recalled, "so it was taken by truck to an
off-site location for transfer to barges. Doug had to make sure
they had the trucks available to get it to us. It took quite a bit
of coordination."
Picker noted this was the largest job he has
tackled, and one of the largest in Hammer
& Steel's history. "It had complex requirements.
We did the layout drawings for the
sheet piling to aid the contractor with his
installation and coordinated each phase
from ordering to coating and delivery. It's
an example of our capabilities and how our
mill contacts allow us to supply large
volume projects."
Houston Fuel Oil Terminals has been impressed with Hammer & Steel according to
Jean, who called their operation "excellent." "The performance of the contract was done
in a very professional way," he said. "Given the opportunity, we will
do business with Hammer & Steel again."
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Branch Offices |
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