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Port Everglades Expansion on Track
[ May 15, 2020 // Gary G Burrows ]Broward County’s Port Everglades is advancing $1.6 billion in infrastructure improvements that are underway and expected to be completed in the next five years.
“The COVID-19 pandemic is certainly impacting this year’s bottom line, but we are fortunate that Port Everglades’ diversified business sectors of cargo, cruise and petroleum can address a dip in one business sector and be balanced out with stability in other revenue-generating business sectors. As a result, Port Everglades has a history of financial success and has budgeted for several sizeable construction projects that are moving forward at a rapid pace with little disruption from the virus,” said Port Everglades’ Glenn Wiltshire, Acting Chief Executive & Port Director.
Containerized Cargo
Underway
is a $471 million berth expansion, the largest infrastructure project in the
Port’s history. The Southport Turning Notch Extension will add new cargo berths
by lengthening the Port’s existing turn-around area from 900 feet to 2,400
feet. Part of this effort includes installing crane rail infrastructure for new
Super Post-Panamax container gantry cranes.
Three Super Post-Panamax container-handling gantry cranes, valued at $41 million, are currently being manufactured in China by Shanghai Zhenhua Heavy Industries Co., Ltd. Inc. (ZPMC) and expected to be in service by the end of 2020. The Port has an option to purchase three additional cranes within five years. The cranes are reportedly the largest low-profile container gantry cranes ever designed and built.
Deepening & Widening Channels
The
U.S. Army Corps of Engineers is in the preconstruction engineering and design
phase of deepening the Port’s navigation channels from 42 feet to 48-50 feet
and widening narrower sections of the channel for safe vessel passage.
In February 2020, this project received $29.1 million in funding under the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers FY 2020 Work Plan. The funding will be used to build a new facility at U.S. Coast Guard Station Fort Lauderdale so the Intracoastal Waterway can be widened by 250 feet. Currently, this chokepoint in the channel puts operating restriction on large Neo-Panamax cargo ships, which affects their ability to transit past docked cruise ships. The Coast Guard Station reconfiguration is the first phase of the larger dredging project.
International Logistics Center
A
new logistics center is being constructed at the Port through a public-private
partnership with nationally recognized commercial developer CenterPoint
Properties. The Port Everglades International Logistics Center, constructed on
16.657 acres of Port property, will be divided into two buildings with the
southernmost building (±145,000 SF) scheduled to be completed by June 2020, and
the northernmost building (±156,000 SF) slated for September 2020. The project
will contain warehouse, refrigerated warehouse, office space, and cross-docking
facilities, which will enhance the services available to shippers using Port
Everglades. A portion of the logistics center will be activated as a
Foreign-Trade Zone.
About Port Everglades’ Growth
Port
Everglades’ growth is guided by a carefully researched comprehensive
Master/Vision Plan that maps out capital improvements and operational
efficiencies over the next five-, 10- and 20-year horizons. Today’s
infrastructure projects, some of which are described here, resulted from the
original Master/Vision Plan adopted 12 years ago. The Port updates the Plan
every 2-5 years to consider market trends, new technology, community
development and environmental initiatives. The Plan is a roadmap that has
steered Port Everglades to becoming the third largest cruise port in the world,
one of the nation’s largest containerized cargo ports and South Florida’s main
hub for gasoline and jet fuel.