Concrete drivers’ strike to delay handful of Kirkland projects, including Totem Lake Connector

Project managers are unsure how long it could be until concrete is available.

Kirkland’s Totem Lake Connector contractor is planning to suspend work on Feb. 11 until concrete is available again due to the ongoing concrete drivers’ strike.

“We have progressed to the point that we need to pour concrete in order to place any of the additional steel for the bridge,” said Jason Noelck, Kraemer North America’s project manager for the pedestrian and bicycle bridge’s construction. “As of the end of this week, we’ll be on an indefinite pause until the strike concludes or until there’s another source of concrete.”

The city claims that when concrete is available again, Kraemer North America will be ready to pour almost immediately. That’s because the contractor built much of the bridge’s forms for concrete while concrete has been unavailable.

But the concrete will probably not be ready for the Totem Lake Connector for as long as a month after the strike has ended.

“We will not be first in line for concrete,” said Aaron McDonald, Kirkland’s senior project engineer tasked with managing the Totem Lake Connector project. “The mega projects in the region will probably get it first.”

All of this will delay the Totem Lake Connector’s completion date. But no one is sure by how much. This is also true of several other capital projects the City of Kirkland is currently managing.

At David Brink Park, for example, the city says the contractor is waiting on concrete to build the stairs that will connect the meandering sidewalk to Lake Washington. The City does not know yet how long this will delay the park’s re-opening.

On Northeast 132nd Street, the Kirkland Fire Department has been responding to community members from its new fire station, Fire Station 24, since mid-January. But some of the fire station’s more peripheral features are not yet complete. These include the concrete sidewalks, curbs, gutters and a concrete pathway.

On Northeast 120th Street, a Kirkland contractor is oh-so-close to completing a project that will improve the purity and the flow of the stormwater that enters the Totem Lake wetlands. Its last remaining work items: concrete sidewalks, curbs and gutter.

And in downtown Kirkland, a pair of Central Way crosswalk improvements at Main Street and Market Street remain in suspension due to the strike.

The strike is also threatening to delay another batch of improvements that haven’t yet begun, such as projects that will improve pedestrian safety at a Finn Hill crosswalk and two other projects that will improve traffic flow at intersections in Totem Lake and Juanita.

“We don’t know when the strike will end,” McDonald said. “But we know it will end. So we are focused on getting each of our projects prepared for when it does.”