Last summer, Caltech began the decommissioning of the Caltech Submillimeter Observatory (CSO) on Maunakea. The removal and restoration of the site is expected to be completed during 2023. A review of what has been accomplished so far and a timeline for the remainder of the decommissioning is described below.
“The decommissioning is a multi-step process with many variables,” said Caltech physics professor and CSO Director Sunil Golwala. “Delays in preparatory steps and contracting brought the physical deconstruction close to winter when weather conditions impeded work at the summit. Removal of the telescope, physical deconstruction of the building housing the telescope, and restoration of the site are now anticipated to begin when summit weather conditions allow in spring, 2023,” said Golwala.
In addition to contractors previously retained (prior press release attached below), Caltech has now completed the selection of cultural and invasive species monitors. “All monitors required by the Conservation District Use Permit (CDUP) are under contract now,” said Golwala. Caltech has retained AECOM/SWCA as the Invasive Species Monitor (on-site and for vehicles), ASM Affiliates as the Archeological Monitor, and TayMade Productions LLC as the Cultural Monitor.
So far, the following decommissioning steps have been completed:
The next steps are as follows:
Once the telescope is removed, the project will be turned over to Goodfellow Bros., the general contractor, who will handle the dismantling of the buildings that housed the CSO telescope, and the full restoration of the site. M3 will provide deconstruction administration services, while AECOM will provide the independent decommissioning construction monitor (IDCM). Caltech anticipates that decommissioning and restoration will be completed during 2023.
The cost of deconstruction and restoration is expected to be more than $4M.
The deconstruction process is governed by the CDUP, which was issued by the state Department of Land & Natural Resources (DLNR) in January 2022. The CDUP sets the terms and conditions that Caltech must follow during the decommissioning. Copies of the CDUP, the Final Environmental Assessment, the SDP and other planning documents can be found here: http://www.cso.caltech.edu/wiki/cso/outreach/outreach.
The CSO came online in 1987 and was used by scientists at Caltech and other institutions, including almost 200 student and postdoctoral researchers, to open a new submillimeter window on the universe. A summary of CSO’s contributions to astronomy and astronomical instrumentation are available here: http://www.cso.caltech.edu/wiki/cso/science/overview.
About Caltech: Caltech is a world-renowned private science and engineering Institute located in Pasadena, California that marshals some of the world's brightest minds and most innovative tools to address fundamental scientific questions and pressing societal challenges.
Previous press release link here.
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