Slide 1:ACEC/South Dakota
2009
Engineering Excellence Awards
Slide 2:Engineering Excellence Awards program celebrates the outstanding achievements of the engineering profession.
Slide 3:A special thanks to our Emcee
Rick Knobe
Founder and Chancellor
of Viewpoint University on KSOO
Slide 4:MERIT AWARDS
Slide 5:Milbank Water Supply and
Treatment Improvements
Milbank, SD
About the Project :About the Project The City of Milbank owned and operated a water supply system consisting of three shallow spring galleries/collector wells, three deep vertical wells, several miles of water transmission pipeline, a pump station with chemical feed capabilities, and two ground storage reservoirs. After several decades of operation, the City of Milbank began to experience problems with line breakage and had concerns with the existing systems ability to meet future flow demands.
As a result, the City of Milbank began in 1998 the first of a multi-phase project to upgrade their water supply, transmission and treatment systems.
The first phase was to replace an original spring gallery with a new radial collector well, construction on Phase 2 began in 2006 with the replacement of the aging 8-inch cast iron and the 10 inch asbestos cement transmission lines with new parallel 12 inch transmission lines stretching 8.5 miles from the water sources to the Milbank treatment facility; Phase 3 consists of a new 2,900 square foot building that houses the chemical feed equipment and high service pumps. This facility has the capacity to treat and pump 1.5 MGD.
David Odens, PE, Project Manager (left) and Daryl Englund, PE, President of Banner Inc. (right) accept the Merit Award for the Milbank Water Supply and Treatment Improvements in Milbank, SD. Jason Kettwig, City of Milbank (center) accepts the award on behalf of the city. :David Odens, PE, Project Manager (left) and Daryl Englund, PE, President of Banner Inc. (right) accept the Merit Award for the Milbank Water Supply and Treatment Improvements in Milbank, SD. Jason Kettwig, City of Milbank (center) accepts the award on behalf of the city.
Slide 13:The Mead Building High Definition
Laser Scanning Project
Yankton, SD
About the Project :About the Project The historic Mead Building on the Human Services Center campus in Yankton carries a story that should not be lost to future generations.
Built over a hundred years ago, it was sentenced to be demolished until the Yankton Co. Historical Society embraced it as a possible regional museum and cultural center.
Eisenbraun and Associates offered the use of their High Definition Survey 3D laser scanning technology to survey the exterior and portion of the interior of the 45,100 square foot structure.
Capturing over 70 million survey points in five days would be an impossible task by any other method, but the futuristic laser scanning technology enabled a two-person survey crew to capture copious amounts of accurate spatial data, creating a dense “point cloud” from which rich detail of the building could be extracted.
The Mead Building has since received national attention, having been designated to the National Trust for Historic Preservation’s 2009 List of America’s Most Endangered Historic Places.
Slide 24:Derek Westenberg, PE, Dan Eisenbraun, PE/LS, President, and Chris Gadeken, PE (l to r) of Eisenbraun and Associates, Inc. accept the Merit Award for The Mead Building High Definition
Laser Scanning Project in Yankton, SD.
Slide 25:Water Reclamation Facility Transfer Pump Replacement
Sioux Falls, SD
About the Project :About the Project This project alleviated a critical hydraulic constraint within the Sioux Falls Water Reclamation Facility (WRF), preparing the facility for the City’s ongoing growth while decreasing the facility’s energy consumption. The project replaced four pumps at the WRF’s Process Pump Station with a more efficient pumping regime. The Process Pump Station transfers wastewater from intermediate to tertiary treatment. The project also involved major structural modifications and expansion of the wet well that precedes the pumps.
Thus, the project exemplified the sustainable design concepts of energy conservation and adaptive reuse.
Already the project is benefitting the 150,000 residents of Sioux Falls by reducing energy costs at the WRD. City maintenance personnel have observed a 21% reduction in pumping energy thus far.
Slide 27:Four new 250 hp motors
Slide 28:New pumps on the lower level driven by vertical shafts
Slide 29:Construction of the wet well expansion and sluice gate structure.
Slide 30:Bypass pumping was necessary to keep the facility operating throughout construction.
Slide 31:Adjustable Frequency Drives control the pump motors.
Slide 32:A new sluice gate structure allows isolation of flow into either half of the newly divided wet well.
Slide 33:Dawn Horner, PE, Project Manager at Howard R. Green Company received the Merit Award for the Water Reclamation Facility Transfer Pump Replacement in Sioux Falls, SD.
Slide 34:HONOR AWARD
Black Hills Airport/Clyde Ice Field Runway 12-30 ExtensionSpearfish, SD :Black Hills Airport/Clyde Ice Field Runway 12-30 ExtensionSpearfish, SD
About the Project :About the Project In the late 1990s, the Lawrence County Airport Board in cooperation with the Federal Aviation Administration began efforts to enhance the utility and safety of the Black Hills Airport/Clyde Ice Field to accommodate the current and projected levels of aviation activity and provide improved approach capabilities. The primary goal of the project was to comply with FAA standards for the design aircraft family, particularly in the areas of runway length and instrument approaches.
The project faced numerous challenges including a tenuous environmental assessment process, land acquisition, geotechncial considerations including deep earth embankments and excavations, coordination with the Federal Emergency Management Agency in crossing a floodplain with the runway, obstacle removal and the relocation of roadways.
Slide 46:Rod Senn, PE, Project Manager at Kadrmas, Lee and Jackson, Inc. received the Honor Award for the Black Hills Airport/Clyde Ice Field Runway 12-30 Extension, Spearfish, SD.
Slide 47:GRAND AWARD
Slide 48:57th Street ReconstructionSioux Falls, SD
About the Project :About the Project In 2005, traffic volumes on 57th Street ranged from 4,000 to 12,000 vehicles per day. Year 2025 traffic volumes were predicted to be 25,000 vehicles per day. Long backups were already developing at intersections during peak periods, the pavement had deteriorated to a very rough condition, and BNSF trains were causing traffic to cut through residential neighborhood streets to avoid the long delays at the at-grade railroad crossing.
The City of Sioux Falls announced its decision to expand 57th Street from two lanes to four lanes from Cliff Avenue to Sycamore Avenue (approximately 2 miles) and hired HDR as the design consultant. The $10.5 million project also included an overpass of the BNSF railroad tracks and a new alignment and widening of Sycamore Avenue. This was the largest roadway project ever undertaken by the City of Sioux Falls.
Slide 50:Airplane photo shows the completed 57th Street project east of Cliff Avenue
Slide 51:Median landscaping was designed to provide a gateway impression
Slide 55:Airplane photo shows the finished railroad overpass and bridge.
Slide 57:Bill Brinker, PE, and James Unruh, PE, from HDR, Inc. accept the 2009 Engineering Excellence Awards Grand Award for the 57th Reconstruction Project in Sioux Falls, SD.
Slide 58:Congratulations!
It is our honor to recognize the following for their outstanding achievement as
Professional Engineers
Slide 59:Mike Heiberger, PE, is a Project Engineer at Schmucker, Paul, Nohr and Associates in Mitchell.
Slide 60:Mike Johnson, PE, Mike is a water/wastewater design engineer at HDR, Inc. in Sioux Falls.
Slide 61:Lance Weatherly, PE/LSIT is a staff engineer in the Municipal Engineering services in the Sioux Falls office of Banner, Inc.
Slide 62:MARK YOUR CALENDARS!
2010
ENGINEERING EXCELLENCE AWARDS
NOVEMBER 6 , 2010