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http://www.hsr.ca.gov/Programs/Const...act/index.html |
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Previous to that in 80s there was a spate of canceled under construction nuclear reactors, mainly due to increasing regulations on nuclear power after three mile island. Many contractors suffered huge losses, some did sue, but in that case utilities were able to make the argument that the circumstances were out of their control. I suppose that is one advantage a private project has, if the government turns against them the project sponsors can argue that. But when the project sponsor is the government that justification isn't going to go as far. I'm getting the impression here that during those multi-billion dollar projects you say you working on, you weren't employed by a prime contractor or a project sponsor in any significant capacity related to the project. The subcontractors and sub-subcontractors you might be more experienced with will occasionally sign contracts with termination clauses like you describe, if they feel confident enough that the sudden termination of their contract won't put them out of business. But with projects of this sort of size and scale a sudden termination of the contract will almost always but the prime contractor in immediate danger of severe financial loss or even bankruptcy, and so it would be unaccountably foolish for any of them to sign a contract that could be ended so liberally. But if you want it from the horse's mouth, here's the peer review of HSR business plan I linked before discussing the immediate construction halt option: Quote:
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*Posts deleted*
A reminder to not troll each other and to stay on topic. |
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I'm sure every agreement has specific language re. non-completion of contract terms. Isn't this why you have lawyers? |
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The Cologne-Frankfurt HSR line is quite expensive, and it obviously serves downtown-to-downtown, so would be impractical for high income professionals (who live west/south of Cologne's center). They would have to backtrack, take a 20 minute train ride to Cologne HBF, then take the new route to Frankfurt HBF while dealing with intercity riders. Then, once in Frankfurt, they would have to transfer to S or U Bahn to get to most offices. That would probably be a 2 hour one-way commute, door to door. Maybe fine for a few times a month, but not for daily travel. And Düsseldorf would be beyond ridiculous. The Neubaustrecke ends at Colgone, so they would have an additional transfer to Rhein-Ruhr trains? No way. Mannheim is close to Frankfurt. The Rhein-Neckar S Bahn lines extend quite a ways south and are easy/frequent commuting. Why would someone pay 5-10x as much to save a few minutes? |
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Putting aside other issues, do you think there's a large cohort of people willing to spend like 25% of their pretax income on daily commuting? |
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MTA is fairly unusual within the US in that it combines these two usually separate parties under one roof, at least for major repairs (new construction like the 2nd avenue subway uses the more usual method). It has the advantage of giving the MTA complete and utter control over the project to make whatever changes it wants at any time it wants, but the lack of any legally binding agreements means the scope of the project can suddenly and radically change without warning (which usually leads to huge delays and massive cost overruns). A large percentage of HSR's cost overruns and delays have been from project changes, under a system where CAHSR went into the construction business itself they'd likely be even higher. Quote:
Of course that's making the very big assumption that housing prices in the bay area will stay at their current ridiculous levels. That's the real weakness of the whole HSR commuting plan. |
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But yeah, this could all be better achieved for a fraction of the cost by upzoning areas near existing transit and building new transit lines followed by subsequent upzoning of more of the peninsula. Also there's always the potential for another tech crash which will send home prices tumbling in a heartbeat. Hell, California simply changing their stupid property tax laws that let these millionaires get away with paying incredibly tiny amounts of property taxes would cause home prices to tumble. |
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As a San Diegan though I'm still not 100% okay with having my tax dollars fund a project that I'm almost certain will never directly benefit me. I have zero faith HSR is going to reach my city, best I'm hoping for are improvements to the LOSSAN corridor. Prop 1A as written was a bit of a political trick. For the full Sacramento to San Diego network we're probably looking at a final price tag of $150-200 billion dollars. Even in the rosy early predictions the final price tag was close to $100 billion. And yet Prop 1A only gave CAHSR $9 billion and assumed the ballences was going to come from somewhere. The Fed hasn't funded local transportation projects more than 50% in decades, and even that 50% tends to top out at $2-3 billion. The rest was always going to come from statewide CA taxes. If you had straight up told CA voters they'd be paying $80 billion for an HSR line they might not have passed Prop 1A. Even now I have little confidence that CA voters will agree to spend the extra $30 billion to tunnel through the Tehachapi pass in the near future. The new governor has implied he wouldn't support it, and CAHSR's own plans seem to show a lack of faith it will happen. Still, an HSR line from Bakersfield to SF with the potential to be expanded to LA at some point in the future is better than just throwing away the money in a pointless political stunt I suppose. |
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130+ years ago, my hometown of Cincinnati set about building a 300+ mile railroad due south to Chattanooga because no private investor could get the cheap bonds that the city could and the line required two huge bridges and 27 tunnels, which threw a lot of uncertainty into the financing. They ran out of money in the middle of the Kentucky hills and had to go back to voters a second time. The second bond issue passed. FFWD to 2019 and the thing is still a prodigious earner for the city. The city earns hundreds of millions per decade in direct leasing revenue as well as millions per year in property tax from the huge yard that sits within city limits. |
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Super commuting is a reality in the UK as well, primarily driven by the crazy house prices in London. |
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Please post all the pics you can since the CHSRA flickr page is only updated once a month and they're past that already this latest period. Not sure why a massive project that needs to maintain all the continued public support it can and reaffirm progress is being made doesn't do photo Instagram/facebook/website whatever updates on practically a daily basis.
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I took a few more photos on a DSLR, I have to get them onto my computer and upload them. |
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^ For construction pics: take Hwy 99 south from Sacramento (Sacto) towards Fresno when you get to the San Joaquin River there's a giant new bridge were it crosses and there's several spots around Turlock and also Fresno for pics.
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https://farm5.staticflickr.com/4816/...8676e68f_c.jpgDSC_0909_38289 by J Sinclair, on Flickr https://farm5.staticflickr.com/4835/...f1167ec4_c.jpgDSC_0918_38298 by J Sinclair, on Flickr The graffiti reaches about 6 feet up, which shows how massive this thing is https://farm5.staticflickr.com/4915/...7d7f1de7_c.jpgDSC_0929_38309 by J Sinclair, on Flickr Further south https://farm5.staticflickr.com/4854/...f89cc4f5_c.jpgDSC_0935_38315 by J Sinclair, on Flickr |
^^^ Thank you for posting those! Great shots. Also there are a bunch more on that user page for those interested.
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A few new photos on the CHSRA flickr page.
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Forgot I took photos of the 180 tunnel as well
https://farm5.staticflickr.com/4880/...5510328e6c.jpgDSC_0875_38256 by J Sinclair, on Flickr https://farm5.staticflickr.com/4846/...74e43b4fd8.jpgDSC_0871_38252 by J Sinclair, on Flickr |
Thanks for the photo updates! :)
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That last picture of the 180 tunnel is kinda weird. The porta potties look tiny.
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Yeah that is some funky perspective. If you look closely though you can see the bulldozers are on top of the mound. Welcome BTW....
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This thing looks like the elevated highways found scattered around Fallout 3.
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I take such genuine delight in not knowing what you're talking about.:shrug: |
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...And I dont quite get it. From north to south... The line is elevated over the river, and then elevated over the UP tracks. Then goes ground level, and then well underground to go below a freaking canal and 180. Right after it pops back up to an elevated train station. And then even higher up for the Cedar viaduct. Why didnt they go over 180 instead of under? |
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That elevation question surely has an answer somewhere in the EIS Final Alignment docs, though it might take a while to find.
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It was historical at ground, lobby on 2nd floor, tracks on top. This is the old station https://farm8.staticflickr.com/7910/...b1c9ff63_c.jpgDSC_0896_38276 by J Sinclair, on Flickr |
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Where the HSR crosses the 180, the freeway is already elevated to cross freeway 99, so it makes sense to put the rail below. Being below the freeway, there is not enough room to go above the rail spur and an irrigation canal, so the HSR has to go below ground level.
I am under the impressions that the rail station will be at ground level... As far as I know the historical train depot is on the other side of the Union Pacific track from where the HSR track will be located. |
^And even though those early engineering docs from'14 were only 15% design, the track elevations and general station distribution are likely to be accurate.
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http://www.cahsrblog.com/wp-content/...hsrstation.jpg Heres the station plan I remember - I attended meetings related to this. https://www.fresno.gov/mayor/wp-cont...ts_reduced.pdf |
Thanks for posting the link to the station plans - I had not seen any plans that detailed before.
On that note, does anybody have the plans for the HSR crossing Herndon Avenue in Fresno? I have a good guess of what they are going to do, but would like to see the plans. :) |
^ Don't interpret those early engineering plans as what the station will look like. Those docs really only vaguelly describe the basic requirements of the station - passenger flow, pick up/drop off, track/platform alignment - but do not in any way suggest how the ultimate architectural form of the station will appear.
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New photos up on the Flickr page.
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Google Maps in the region has been updated again. It was updated not that long ago so only slightly more progress is visible, but still good to see something getting done.
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For instance in the Feb 2018 pics this whole portion of the bridge over the San Joaquin River is just pylons: https://i.imgur.com/EJZvO0j.jpg |
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https://www.facebook.com/CaliforniaH...2206337318323/ |
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Newsom is terminating the project.
https://www.apnews.com/801b4fb4ff954d1b91bce4aad77f7caa Quote:
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Hold on while I kill myself...
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