Denver's RTD approves unsolicited proposal for North Metro Rail Project

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Denver's RTD approves unsolicited proposal for North Metro Rail Project This article is part of a daily series of MegaProjects articles. If you want to know more about PPP projects with a considerable size visit our MegaProjects section. You can receive them by email on a daily basis.

Denver's Regional Transportation District (RTD) has determined that an unsolicited proposal submitted on February 22 by a Graham Contracting Limited-led team for the North Metro Rail Project has technical merit.

RTD staff spent about a month conducting a comprehensive evaluation of the proposal consistent with the agency's Unsolicited Proposals Policy. Given that RTD staff believes the proposal has technical merit, the agency plans to accelerate the release of a Request for Proposals (RFP) for the North Metro project.

Denver's RTD line

In January, RTD announced it would release an RFP in October to build North Metro up to 72nd by refinancing some of agency's debt, issuing new sales tax bonds and using available local funds.

However, given that Graham's unsolicited proposal has technical merit, RTD wants to move up the RFP process for the North Metro Line to this summer. The next step will be preparing the RFP for a summer release.

The North Metro project is an 18.4-mile electrified commuter rail line that will connect Denver and Adams County by serving Commerce City, Northglenn and Thornton.

Over the past few years, RTD has been very public with its "call for innovation" to the private sector asking for solutions to help RTD complete the partially funded FasTracks projects as soon as possible.

In March 2012, RTD received an unsolicited proposal from Kiewit Infrastructure Company for the I-225 Rail Project. After a competitive process, Kiewit was awarded a contract to design and build the whole line by the end of 2015, with opening scheduled in 2016.

Source: RTD

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