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This profile was automatically generated using 9 references found on the Internet. This information has not been verified. Learn more...
This profile was automatically generated using 9 references found on the Internet. This information has not been verified. Learn more...
View all 9 references Web References
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1. www.aspendailynews.com
www.aspendailynews.com/recent/ - [Cached]Published on: 6/25/2008 Last Visited: 6/26/2008
It was a pleasure to work with Tom Metheny, the project manager for the Maroon Creek bridge.He is retired from CDOT and is a consultant engineer for Carter & Burgess.Tom met with me many times over the last two years and was instrumental in making sure the bus stop across from the Country Inn will be accessible during winter months. -
2. www.aspentimes.com
www.aspentimes.com/article/200 - [Cached]Published on: 5/31/2008 Last Visited: 5/31/2008
"I don't know what it says; it's a bunch of letters and pictures," said Tom Metheny, project manager with CDOT.
The images are about 4-feet high and 25-feet wide but are out of sight of the road, Metheny said
"They're doing a nice job," Metheny quipped, adding that the artwork is not offensive or vulgar.
"The only thing is we gotta go and sandblast it now," Metheny said.
The new bridge will be finished on Wednesday, June 4, Metheny said.But new bus-lane striping will delay full opening to vehicles until mid-July.
There are cameras on the bridge to monitor any vandalism, Metheny said, but they were recently disconnected as the bridge neared completion.
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Staff from BTE Concrete, the contractor for the job, will sandblast the graffiti off the bridge on Wednesday, the day the bridge is scheduled for completion, Metheny said.Sandblasting should cost between $600 and $800 - money that will be a project expense and likely shared by the contractor and CDOT, Metheny said.
"They can't get final acceptance from CDOT until we're satisfied with everything," Metheny said."It's just not something we want on a new bridge."
After the contractor finishes the final sandblasting, any future graffiti problems are up to CDOT maintenance crews, Metheny said.
Metheny joked that it shouldn't be difficult to find the late-night painter.
"You probably could go to an art class to find [the perpetrator] because they're pretty good," he said. -
3. Aspen Times News for Aspen Colorado - News
www.aspentimes.com/article/200 - [Cached]Published on: 4/21/2006 Last Visited: 4/21/2006
Simply plowing a road to allow workers access to the construction site took three to four hours some days this winter, said Tom Metheny, project manager for the Colorado Department of Transportation.The road travels north out of the golf course into the Maroon Creek basin.
"The winter was a little hard on the construction activity," Metheny said.
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The area north of the golf course had a "fair amount of snow" this winter, and the road had to be in sufficient shape to allow concrete trucks and other equipment into the work site, Metheny said.
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"It's only going to be about four feet away from the old bridge," Metheny said.

