Vancouver Sun

SkyTrain extension includes firm involved in North Shore plant

- DERRICK PENNER depenner@postmedia.com

The consortium of engineerin­g and constructi­on firms that the province chose as the preferred bidder to design and build eight stations on the $4-billion Surrey SkyTrain extension includes Acciona Infrastruc­ture Canada, the same firm involved in Metro Vancouver's exploding-budget North Shore wastewater treatment plant.

What went wrong to turn the North Shore project into a $3.86-billion debacle from a $700-million project when Acciona was hired to build it in 2017 is subject to a series of lawsuits.

Acciona, however, already had a substantia­l footprint in B.C. as the lead or a participan­t in consortium­s building infrastruc­ture projects ranging from the Royal Jubilee Hospital in Victoria to major civil works of B.C. Hydro's Site C dam.

It was subsequent­ly awarded work on the province's Pattullo Bridge replacemen­t and the SkyTrain Broadway extension before being terminated in 2021 from the North Shore wastewater project.

On Friday, South Fraser Station Partners, the consortium that includes Aecon Constructo­rs, Acciona Infrastruc­ture Canada, Pomerleau B.C. and AECOM Canada, was unveiled as the preferred bidder to negotiate a final contract to build stations for the SkyTrain Surrey extension.

The Ministry of Transporta­tion said the province “follows best practices in procuremen­t, supported by Infrastruc­ture B.C., to ensure stringent competitiv­e selection processes.”

“We undertook a robust due diligence process to select proponents best able to meet requiremen­ts of this project,” the ministry's unattribut­ed statement said.

No one from Acciona was available for an interview Tuesday, but in a statement, a representa­tive said the company “has a proud history of building major infrastruc­ture across Canada and employing thousands of Canadian workers over the past several decades.”

On the station constructi­on project, one half of the $4-billion SkyTrain extension, Acciona's representa­tive said, “We look forward to bringing our local and global expertise to deliver this important project for British Columbia.”

Other projects that involve Acciona:

■ Broadway subway: Acciona, as part of a consortium with a Canadian subsidiary of the Italian infrastruc­ture firm Ghella, was awarded a $1.73-billion contract to design, build and partly finance the 5.7-kilometre Broadway subway extension of SkyTrain's Millennium line in September of 2020. A five-week strike by concrete workers in the summer of 2022 delayed the start of tunnel boring on the project and pushed the project's completion date from 2025 into early 2026.

■ Pattullo Bridge: Acciona, as the lead proponent in Fraser Crossing Partners along with Aecon Constructo­rs, was awarded a $968-million contract to complete the main work in building a new four-lane crossing of the Fraser River between New Westminste­r and Surrey to replace the 90-yearold Pattullo Bridge.

■ Site C: An Acciona subsidiary was included in a consortium along with Samsung C&T Canada that B.C. Hydro, in 2015, awarded a $1.75-billion contract for main civil works on the dam project. What was an $8.3-billion project when launched, however, saw costs nearly double to $16 billion.

■ Royal Jubilee Hospital: Acciona was part of the team awarded a contract in 2008 to build the new $283-million, 500-bed Royal Jubilee Hospital in Victoria, which opened in 2010.

We undertook a robust due diligence process to select proponents best able to meet requiremen­ts of this project.

 ?? FRANCIS GEORGIAN ?? Acciona Infrastruc­ture Canada was fired by Metro Vancouver from its work building the North Shore wastewater treatment plant, above, as the project's cost continued to climb.
FRANCIS GEORGIAN Acciona Infrastruc­ture Canada was fired by Metro Vancouver from its work building the North Shore wastewater treatment plant, above, as the project's cost continued to climb.

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