A Strategic Blueprint for Construction Excellence is DDC’s comprehensive plan to improve capital project delivery. The plan will decrease construction costs and project timelines to deliver projects faster and within budget, making more efficient use of City resources.
Revisions to the NYC DEP Standard Sewer and Water Specifications, updating the requirements for restoration of pavement surfaces after sewer and water main work.
Updates to the NYC DEP Standard Sewer and Water Specifications and the NYC DEP Standard Water Main Details to update requirements for installation of fire hydrants.
The Contractor shall provide, furnish and maintain a fully equipped field office for the exclusive use of and occupancy by the Department’s engineering personnel and/or Supervising Consultant and by the engineering personnel of private utilities when specified.
Sheeting and Bracing revisions to the New York City of Department of Environmental Protection standard sewer and water specifications dated 8/8/22. Attachments - Section 40.05 (7 page.)
Revisions to the New York City Department of Transportation standard highway specifications 5/16/22. Section 2.10(Attachments) - Replace the revised section in Attachment 1.
This report analyzes progress on resiliency capital spending to date, after Superstorm Sandy. The report goes on to provide a snapshot of the property values, land uses, and essential infrastructure in the coastal floodplain, illustrating the range of critical assets at risk.
The wellbeing of a city of more than eight million people rests upon an extensive array of municipal infrastructure and services. Fire stations, police precincts, and EMS bases to respond to emergencies. Sanitation garages and waste transfer stations to dispose of our trash.
New York City’s annual infrastructure survey report estimated in 2020 that the maintenance costs of the Riverside Park Bridge W. 79th Street Traffic Circle would be $76 million. When the project went to bid just a few months later, the actual cost was almost double that, at $149.9 million.
MOCTO has identified five principles for broadband service: Equity, Performance, Affordability, Privacy, and Choice. This report describes how broadband service in New York City, and the infrastructure through which it is provided, currently delivers on these five principles.