The Miami Herald
August 31, 2003
Section: Broward
Edition: Broward
Page: 3BR
Memo: HOW IT WORKS
FROM THE PITS TO THE 'PIKES
EVAN S. BENN, ebenn@herald.com
South
Florida rests on a blanket of high-quality limestone, but most people never see
the rock in its virgin state.
They do see
the highways, houses and high-rise buildings made from mixing the rock with
cement.
They also
see the miles-long conveyor belts that run perpendicular to Florida's Turnpike
in northwest Miami-Dade County, hauling rock from the ground to rail cars and
dump trucks.
``People
see this when they're on the turnpike, and they don't realize what exactly is
going on,'' said Alan MacVicar, safety manager for Rinker Materials' Medley
facility.
Two of the
state's largest producers of limestone rock - Rinker and Tarmac America -
operate literally a stone's throw away from each other. Tarmac employs 150
people in its rock division; Rinker has about 160.
The
89-square-mile area from the Broward County line south to Kendall Drive in
northwest Miami-Dade is known as the Lake Belt for its many, human-made
limestone lakes.
``When a
lot of people think of Florida, they think of sand,'' MacVicar said. ``The
truth is, this area here has the best rock in the state.''
The
youngest, too.
South
Florida's limestone is about 500,000 years old - a newborn in comparison with
the 5-billion-year-old rocks that make up the Grand Canyon, said John Hoyer,
manager of Tarmac's aggregates (rock) division.
HEAVY USE
To get a
better understanding of how extensively limestone rock is used in South
Florida, Hoyer offered:
Ninety-eight
percent of homes here are built on a concrete-block system.
An average
single-family home uses about 3,500 concrete blocks, which equates to about 50
tons of rock.
All major
roadways are made of either concrete or asphalt.
Limestone
rock is an integral component of both, making up about 95 percent of roads in
South Florida.
Concrete,
the more durable of the two, is mainly used to build South Florida's roads, and
the cheaper asphalt is used more in the Northeast, Hoyer said.
Here's how
it works, from buried, solid rock to completed roads and buildings:
Crews dig
small holes 75 feet into the banks of the lakes, where a solid layer of
limestone begins four feet underground. A precise series of explosives is set
off in the holes, blasting the rock into football-size chunks.
The chunks
are scooped up by huge machines called draglines and put onto piles by the
sides of the lakes to dry. Dump trucks haul the rock from the dig sites to a
primary crushing machine.
This
crusher, a steel-toothed contraption that squeezes the rocks, crunches the
chunks to about six inches or smaller. A maze of airline-luggage-like conveyor
belts takes the rock through various other crushers, depending on the sizes
needed by the companies' outside contractors. The state Department of
Transportation, for example, requires a specific-size rock for its roads.
Driveway paving companies may prefer another size.
The
operations are largely run on electric power. Hoyer compared his electric bill
last month - $183 - to Tarmac's monthly usage - about $180,000.
10 MILLI0N
TONS
Both Tarmac
and Rinker load their crushed rocks onto hundreds of rail cars and trucks each
day, usually shipping thousands of tons daily and about 10 million tons a year.
Most of the
rock stays in Broward, Miami-Dade and Palm Beach counties, but trains also
carry the materials all the way up to northern Florida. The problem is, South
Florida will be rockless in less than a half-century.
Mining at
the 16-hour-a-day rate they do now, both Rinker and Tarmac representatives said
they'll run out of the underground limestone in about 40 years.
Any new
South Florida highway or building projects - if another material hasn't been
created by then - would require importing of rock from other states or
countries, Hoyer said.
Because of
blasting regulations and the Everglades preservation effort, there is no
limestone mining in Broward County, Hoyer and MacVicar said.
Even before
blasting restrictions were enacted several years ago, Broward's rapid
development kept limestone companies from mining here, they said. Still, both
Tarmac and Rinker have concrete plants in Broward where limestone gets mixed
with other materials into concrete, then gets trucked off to construction
sites.
Hoyer said
not many in the industry are thinking about what will happen when South
Florida's limestone runs out. But, he said, one thing is for sure.
``It won't
be as cheap as it is now,'' Hoyer said. ``The costs of roads, houses - just
about everything that's built from rock - will go up.''
|