Town wharf will be raised up a foot and a half in winter-long project.
Tim Johnson

Rebuilding Memorial Wharf, From the Harbor Up

The $4 million reconstruction project at Memorial Wharf in Edgartown is nearly halfway finished and on track for completion by spring. The project will raise the wharf about a foot and a half.

The $4 million reconstruction project at Memorial Wharf in Edgartown is nearly halfway finished and back on track for completion by spring, after a few construction hiccups.

Unforeseen issues included a piling that was too close to an underwater conduit.
Ray Ewing
Unforeseen issues included a piling that was too close to an underwater conduit.
Ray Ewing

A major public works effort by the town in the face of rising seas, the project will raise the wharf about a foot and a half and rebuild its crumbling infrastructure, with a goal of shoring it up for decades to come.

Construction began this fall and will continue through the winter. The contractor for the project is BTT Marine Construction.

Funding is coming from $3 million in town meeting appropriations and $1 million state grant money from the Econonmic Seaport Council.

The wharf work is the second step of a three-phase, five-to-10 year project to overhaul and raise the entire parking lot. Future plans call for raising Dock street as well.

It marks the third major climate change-inspired project undertaken on the Edgartown Harbor in recent years.

Two years ago the Edgartown Yacht Club was raised and rebuilt on the other end of Dock street. A little farther down harbor, the historic Vose Boathouse was also raised and rebuilt.

At Memorial Wharf, unforeseen issues included a piling that was too close to an underwater electrical conduit and the discovery of significant corrosion in the steel sheathing beneath the parking lot adjacent to the Chappaquiddick Ferry.

Shoring up the old wharf in the face of rising seas is part of a three-phase plan that will include raising Dock street as well.
Ray Ewing
Shoring up the old wharf in the face of rising seas is part of a three-phase plan that will include raising Dock street as well.
Ray Ewing

“Any of the small issues that we’ve had to deal with we’ve overcome. We’ve got a good team in place . . . and we’re getting along with the [Chappy] ferry . . . we’re accommodating each other,” said Steve Ewing, chairman of the Memorial Wharf restoration committee, in a recent interview with the Gazette. “We’re moving ahead in a really productive way now. If the weather holds reasonably well, then we should be able to finish on time and within budget.”

Completion date has been set for Memorial Day.

Deterioration in the top 18 inches of steel sheeting was outlined in a memo from the engineer to the wharf committee. The bad steel was cut away, and a concrete cap will added to encase an additional 12 inches of steel. Then two feet of new steel will be added on top of the concrete cap.

“We came up with a good plan to deal with that,” Mr. Ewing said.

He said the concrete will be poured in the coming week.

Last month the utility giant Eversource flagged a proposed piling as being potentially too close to a bundle of undersea cables that supply power to Chappaquiddick. The town agreed to change the angle of the piling and an Eversource representative was on site to make sure everything went as planned.

The contractor for the project is BTT Marine Construction.
Ray Ewing
The contractor for the project is BTT Marine Construction.
Ray Ewing

“The Eversource issue was a challenge, which we dealt with and we came out of it fine. Everyone is happy with that conclusion and we were able to get all the pilings in where they needed to go to support the wharf and the pavilion without hitting the cables,” Mr. Ewing said.

The town incurred roughly $300,000 in additional costs for the work, according to a change order for the work. The cost falls within the contingency budget built into the contract, town administrator James Hagerty said.

All load bearing pilings have been driven, according to Mr. Ewing. Once the concrete cap is poured, the new wharf will be framed in front of it. The new wharf will then be decked and the pavilion will be slid back into place. The last part of the job involves repeating the cutting-and-capping process on the sides of the wharf not covered by the pavilion.

“To complete the job, there’s quite a bit more work to be done,” Mr. Ewing said.

Mr. Hagerty gave an update on the project to the Edgartown select board last week.

“We did run into some snags initially. I think we made up for that time accordingly,” he said. “There were obviously concerns about the underground power line. There were concerns about some of the status of the sheeting underneath, but we’ve caught back up. We’re still on pace, barring anything unexpected, we’re at about 45 per cent completion.”

Comments

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Mon, 12/27/2021 - 10:18

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Townie Edgartown

So, you lift the wharf, but the rest of the waterfront says at the same. Town floods, Wharf doesn’t.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Mon, 12/27/2021 - 11:16

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Bob Edgartown

Wow any way you can spin climate change you guys are on it. This was done because the infrastructure needed to be replaced the yacht club was done because the infrastructure needed to be replaced. At the time of replacing it only made sense to build it higher because we can. These tax dollars were not spent because of climate change. And that is how tax dollars should be spent.

R Scott Patterson Edgartown

Spin? So in your mind the wharf and EYC are being raised for no reason other than “because they can”? Way to bend over backwards to ignore reality.

Roddy Seasonal Visitor

Right on Bob! I’m tired as well for “climate change”, which has been well documented throughout history as being primarily cyclical in nature, being politically weaponized for all the wrong reasons.

David Hidden Cove

Roddy - I have to respectfully disagree with your intimation that climate change is somehow being politicized and not real. Yes, our global climate has warmed and cooled over the millennium but NEVER to the extent and brevity as we now are witnessing in real time. 97% of climatologists at NASA, NOA, The UN’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, and national governments in 193 countries all agree that ‘man’ has significantly shifted global climate AND we are perilously close to a tipping point of runaway warming. Who suffers most ? The poor in countries who are today suffering in their inability to grow adequate food due to warming , drought, and sea level rise. Please don’t shrug climate change off as some passing inconvenience or a political weapon. It’s real and will get worse - much worse- for our grandchildren as we quickly approach 3 degrees C. That’s why 193 nations signed the Paris Climate Accord and met in Glasgow again this year to consider ways in which we can reduce CO2 emissions 45% by 2030 and to a net zero level by 2050. Casually dismissing global warming as a “political “ matter ( or as one past US President famously referred to it as “a hoax”) is much like saying COVID 19 and other past/future variants of SARS is not a real pandemic even though 816,000 Americans have died from it in 18 months. I can’t comment on the wisdom of reconstructing the wharf in Edgartown, but I can and will speak out on the reality of our fast changing climate as a result of mankind’s failings in protecting Mother Earth.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 12/28/2021 - 06:31

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George Stein Oak Bluffs

How high will the base of the adjoining hotel construction be built ? 75 new rooms in a flood zone is intriguing

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 12/31/2021 - 07:01

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Jim Nyc/Chappy

Gee …. Vineyard building deja vu Wasn’t the cost of this originally $2 million? How did it double…..and now it is just the start for for this “5-10 year” project…what will final tally be for taxpayers?

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Sun, 01/02/2022 - 21:49

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Charlie Callahan So Boston/Edgartown

Are the contractors paying the workers prevailing union wages. They are supposed to on a government project

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