NRA have this morning advertised for engineering consultancy to design medium to long term solution to the junction!
:):)
Chris_5339762 wrote: » The weekly update from this week: I'm imagining they are wrong because highwaymaniac has actually read the tender.
• TII invited tenders for the main construction works design and build contract on Monday the 2nd of September 2019. • During the tender period for the main construction contract, a number of key advance work items will be progressed as referenced in recent updates. • Installation of a working platform to facilitate future embankment construction in the area near Bury’s Bridge will continue intermittently for a number of weeks. No disruption to traffic is anticipated in this area. • The permanent fencing works in the Gaelscoil Ui Drisceoill have been completed. • Ground investigation works will be getting underway over the next couple of days in an area west of the Pfizer plant. These ground investigation works are specific to Gas Networks Ireland transmission mains in the area and the purpose of the ground investigation works is to facilitate design of appropriate service protection works at this location. • Details of further advance work items will continue to be provided via this weekly newsletter.
highwaymaniac wrote: » I had a look at the documents on etenders - it is only the prequalification stage unfortunately - 5 contractors will be shortlisted. The form of contract selected is the standard public works design and build contract, I thought Sisk have developed the design, I wonder will they retender for it this time around?
Chris_5339762 wrote: » To be fair, they did get this published really quickly after the breakdown in the old tender.
marno21 wrote: » Tender out for Dunkettle Interchange upgradehttps://irl.eu-supply.com/ctm/Supplier/PublicPurchase/152980/0/0?returnUrl=ctm/Supplier/publictenders&b=ETENDERS_SIMPLE €120m estimate this time. Quite a jump.
Truckermal wrote: » Scrolled back to page 1 to see this sarcastic post....:D
Drax wrote: » Excellent news indeed... expect it in around 10 years. :pac:
Chris_5339762 wrote: » Is that actually going ahead though? I don't think its been doing as the package of immediate Dunkettle works, and is a totally disconnected thing which is very much will-it-wont-it.
kub wrote: » Not meaning to sound pedantic, but the signaling of that roundabout will be on the list now for the City Council considering their colleagues in the County never got around to it before the boundary extension.
hans aus dtschl wrote: » Good observation. But Dunkettle roundabout will be signalised by the Co Co with the same pot of money that the bike/walk route is getting. So that won't be free-flow any more, which might negate the issue. I notice that they're being very quiet about this signalisation. It's not a very nice design and I think they know that. The people intending to go to the northern parts of Glanmire around Sallybrook etc will be newly enthusiastic about using the M8 rather than R639. But that's probably a good thing.
grogi wrote: » There is an easy fix for that really... A simple bridge to allow reverse of traffic... They are commonly used in Italy, where they have limited space for interchanges due to mountainous terrain. Exp. here - the interchange is only 'half-done' while the other directions are done by reversing at the bridge to the south of the IC.
Chris_5339762 wrote: » Actually thinking about it, if I were traveling N25(W) to M8(N) anywhere close to rush hour, I would now go down to the Dunkettle Roundabout at Glanmire, go right around it, and use the new slip road. This could actually backfire quite badly, as a lot of people doing that motion at rush hour.... which there will be from little island.... will get priority at the roundabout and will clog up the N8 Tivoli Dual Carriageway outbound approaching the Dunkettle Roundabout far worse than it is at the moment. And you'd want to be crazy to tackle the Dunkettle interchange when you can do the same movement via the Dunkettle roundabout. I fear this could be very bad, actually.
Chris_5339762 wrote: » It will help a tad, as traffic going from Cork - Dublin will be able to take the slip and the current traffic lights that that movement would have to use will now only have to deal with Cork - N40(W) movements and a few to Little Island. It'll mean less queueing on the roundabout in the evenings and possibly slightly better flow. It won't be groundbreaking, but every little will help.
blindsider wrote: » The project will be completed by Wednesday lunch-time!
highwaymaniac wrote: » Looks to have been hastily prepared! The design shown there for the N8toM8 slip doesn't tie into the existing northbound M8, it is very tight for space looks like it will have to a temporary measure with a shortened merge. Will this help the operation of the roundabout? Not sure that it will - unless they give longer intervals between green lights for N8 to Tunnel movement because more queuing space available? Or am I missing something here?
marno21 wrote: » Update from Cork County Council. Project tender to be awarded in 2020; partial opening in 2022 with full completion in 2023. Works to be completed between now and tender award. 1. Construction of a freeflow link between the N8 outbound and the M8 northbound (shown in image below in red) 2. Construction of the shared use cycle/pedestrian route adjacent to the Cork – Dublin road link. This will be a segregated route separated from the road link by noise/environmental barriers, as well as vehicle restraint barriers (shown in image below in green) 3. Works to the major utilities crossing the Dunkettle site. These include gas, electricity, fibre optic telecoms and trunk watermains serving Cork City and Little Island. Diversion and protection works to these vital services within a corridor developed during the Stage 1 design process will significantly de-risk the main construction works and reduce the construction programme.
Chris_5339762 wrote: » Its all very frustrating, but its something at least. That N8 - M8 link may take a little bit of the pressure off in the evenings, as there will be less red time and less backing up on the roundabout. Unless Sisk were all out of proportion on the amount they wanted, I think TII should have accepted things. Say it was €50 million more than the government intended. Its not unreasonable to assume more than €50 million in economic loss will be caused by a years delay in this starting. Thats Dunkettle stalled for a year and the M28 stalled in the courts. Not looking great really.