Abstract

Despite many innovations and advances in technology, subway construction remains a challenging and taxing proposition, even under the best of circumstances. Given the enormous cost of subway construction and the impact of construction activity on overlying neighborhoods and communities, subway projects can attract adverse publicity and the associated negative public perception of the mass-transit industry. Major cost and schedule overruns are not uncommon. Witness, for example, the bad press that the Los Angeles Metro's subway construction recently attracted in the local and the national press. Against this backdrop, there is a clear need for reviewing the state of the art and for examining the range of options available to owners for minimizing the trials and tribulations of subway construction activity. Drawing upon experience from major subway system construction projects in the United States, particularly the Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority (WMATA), and from elsewhere, this study sets o...

Full Text
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