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Boyle’s transportation engineers handle such diverse assignments as
bridge inspections, traffic studies, and alignment evaluations, and they
design everything from traffic signals to weigh stations, to include multimodal
transit facilities, bike trails, parking structures and lots.
In fact,
one of the largest design projects in the history of Boyle is a $231-million
extension to a commuter light-rail system in San Diego. Below is a sampling
of Boyle’s far-reaching capabilities in transportation.
Interstate
15 corridor
in San Diego, California
Boyle was part of a team that defined and compared several types
of bus and rail transit improvements for the Interstate 15 corridor
in metropolitan San Diego.
Our engineers helped develop conceptual engineering
plans for high-speed bus/high-occupancy-vehicle, light-rail,
and high-performance-rail alternatives.
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Parking
structure in Albuquerque
Boyle designed, and provided construction-phase services for, a
200,000-square-foot parking structure adjacent to the Albuquerque
Convention Center.
The four-level parking garage can hold 700 vehicles.
Our experts designed the structure to resist high winds
and seismic and thermal loads.
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Weigh
stations in Florida
Our firm has designed weigh-in-motion stations for the Florida Department
of Transportation that feature advanced technology to record a truck’s
weight while the rig is traveling at 45 miles per hour.
Weigh-in-motion offers greater efficiency than static
weighing and helps prevent trucks from getting backed
up to the highway.
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Recreational
Trail in Southern California
Engineers at our firm prepared the master plan for, and designed
portions of, a 21-mile, multiuse recreational trail that runs through
six Southern California cities.
The trail serves cyclists, pedestrians, runners, and
equestrians, and also celebrates the history of a historic
railway.
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