 So, this is the community meeting for 7th street at Burnett storm drain rehabilitation. This is a city storm water project specifically part of the storm drain rehab program. My name is Dylan Johns and I'm the assistant project manager for the city. Mike Bennett is the primary project manager and he's also on this call. The city's storm drain rehabilitation program is a. Program that was started within the last. 5 or 6 years to proactively maintain their the city's aging storm drain infrastructure. We investigate areas with historical pipe failures areas with that are known to have older infrastructure. Or just known to be hot spots for problems. The storm drain pipes are investigated using closed circuit TV inspections primarily utilizing. Basically, a camera mounted on a small. We'll robot that can drive up the pipes. The videos that are taken are then reviewed by engineers to identify which pipes have significant defects and then those pipes are prioritized. For rehabilitation. We try to utilize trenchless pipe rehab technologies whenever possible to help minimize surface disturbance. Our 3 most common techniques that we use are tiered in place pipe, which you'll also hear referred to as CIPP. Geopolymer pipe lining and pipe bursting. CIPP is a resin soaked canvas or felt material that's pulled into the existing pipe and inflated to the. Inside diameter of the old pipe and then is cured using hot water or steam to solidify in place. The geopolymer pipe lining is a cementitious pipe liner that's sprayed. Onto the inside of the existing pipe and is then cures and hardens into a new. Structurally sound pipe inside the old pipe. Although that technique we typically only use on larger pipes because of the technology that's available for it. For pipe bursting, the existing pipe is broken and pushed out of the way using a kind of drill like head. That also pulls a new pipe into place behind it. For this project, like I said, as part of the storm drain rehabilitation program, we're going to be rehabilitating the existing pipe. That runs along 7th street from Lexington to cherry and then at cherry street, the pipe turns and follows 6th street. And we'll be rehabbing the pipe all the way up to burn it along 6. The existing pipe, as you can see in the picture on the left is aging and deteriorating mostly. Severe cracking is the most common issue in this pipe. We'll be extending significantly extending the pipes service life. This exhibit just shows the project limits. Like I already said, we're working along 7th from Lexington to cherry and then 1 block on 6th street from cherry to burn it. HDR incorporated provided the engineering design for this project and will be assisting the city with construction services. PM construction and rehab 1, the bid for construction on this project. Most of the pipe rehabilitation that they'll be doing will be using CIP. Although I did mention a point were displaced endless inlet lateral at the corner of 6 and burn it and because it's just. To have some temporary lane closures along 6th street and 7th street. Dylan, could you please repeat this information on this slide? You or break we lost you for about 15 seconds. Oh, okay. Okay, I'll just I'll restart it from from the top of it then. HDR incorporated provided the engineering design on this project and will also be assisting the city with construction services. PM construction and rehab 1, the city's bid for the construction contract. Most of the pipe rehabilitation will be doing will be done using CIP. Although they will be doing some excavation at the corner of 6 and burn it to repair the displaced inlet lateral that I mentioned earlier. During construction, there will be temporary lane closures on 6 and 7th street. And we're expecting to have crews start mobilizing on site around February 6. The construction contract duration is 4 months. However, we're expecting to be complete. By the end of April, so little, most likely be closer to 3. The construction contract ended up being 524,800 dollars. All of the largest from 1st United Methodist Church. To use a portion of 1 of their surface parking lots as a staging area for construction equipment. If anybody would like more information on the project. Or needs to get my contact information or Mike's contact information. Details and updates are available at the city's project web page, which is. The link at the bottom of this slide. We'll get you there. You can also Google city of Fort Worth capital projects. And it's typically the top search result. You can go to that page and there's a search feature that you can search by project name. As far as traffic impacts with this project, the most significant will be at the intersection of 6th street and burn it street for the. Inlet lateral repair. We will be closing down 3 lanes. On 6, 6th street to allow for the excavation and repair of the storm train pipe there. They'll also be temporary lane closures on a long 7th street to allow CIP crews. To do their work, the those temporary lane closures on 7th will be along the north side of the road. Only 1, only the northern most lane, which is the right lane heading west on 7th will be closed. There'll also be a turn lane on Henderson that's impacted. And we'll be working with any businesses that are affected to make sure that we accommodate them being able to access their parking lots or anything else. That may be temporary block temporarily blocked by construction activities. But all the affected roads will still maintain traffic flow during construction. Oh, actually, I guess on traffic impacts 1 thing we are considering. Is doing 24 hour work for the CIP this would allow us to shorten the duration of. The CIP installation from about a week to just 24 hours. However, due to the city noise ordinance and the location of some apartments in town homes. Downtown we're evaluating if we're going to be able to do that work and still maintain the decibel level levels required. In residential areas, so we're currently working to evaluate that. And that contact information for Mike Bennett and myself as well as the city's. Inspector on this project, Josh Manry and the city's or the contractors. Project manager Bailey Morrow is all available on this slide for anybody. Who would like it still just in case somebody. Ask curious, how will this project impact? What are the drainage impacts from this project? We had engineer on the project evaluate that and they determined there wouldn't be any impact. To the storm drains capacity with this project, it'll be the same as it is today. We're not trying to make anything better on this one, right? We're not improving. We're not making drainage improvements. We're not reducing flooding for anybody. You there, I think we lost you again today. Nothing will be changing. Could you all restate that that this project is not to improve drainage or flood protection, but it is just to rehabilitate existing pipe. Can y'all hear me any better now? Yes, much better. Yes, so yeah, that's I like the mic were saying, we're not improving drainage conditions. We're just maintaining existing conditions and. Preventing the storm drain pipe from potentially failing. And I heard you correctly that we have gotten all you've gotten all easements that are necessary for this project. So, no, no additional easements are needed. Is that correct? Yes, we only needed 1, it was a temporary construction easement that we're using as a staging area. All the other all the work will be done within a city right of way. Existing city right away, those are the questions that I had, Linda. Do you have any other questions? No, I think you covered them. Thanks, Mike. Josh, Manny, Bailey, do y'all have anything to add before I stop recording and in the meeting? No, I don't have anything. Go ahead, I just was going to say, I don't have anything either. There's 4 names on here. Is there any way for them to know who they should contact if they're they see an emergency on site? Who's the 1st person they should contact? Or maybe who's to contact if they have just overall project questions. For overall project questions, I would be the best person to reach out to Dylan. I'm Dylan Johns. As far as emergencies on site, Mike, who would you direct them to? I direct them to the inspector reach out to the inspector. They see anything. Crazy, of course, there is on the sign, it's that we will have a project sign on site. And there is emergency contact information on that site for true emergencies. And we should be able to they should be able to reach the inspector, though, for just project questions that are. Happening out on out in the field. That's correct. I think that covers everything. I'm going to stop recording.