AASHTO awards top prizes in Faces of Transportation contest.

Press Release Summary:



During Faces of Transportation competition, 28 transportation department employees from 21 states and 6 private citizens submitted 121 photographs. Grand Prize was awarded to California DOT Engineer Martin Chandrawinata for photograph of iron worker using a cutting torch while suspended from San Francisco-Oakland Bay Bridge. People's Choice Award was presented to photographer Bill Hall who captured California DOT Engineer Matt Bruce inspecting cable band installation near top of same bridge.



Original Press Release:



AASHTO Awards Top Prizes In the Faces of Transportation Photo Contest



WASHINGTON -- Two spectacular photographs taken of laborers at work on prominent sections of the San Francisco-Oakland Bay Bridge won the Grand Prize and the People's Choice Award in the Faces of Transportation competition sponsored by the American Association of State Highway and Transportation officials.



A judge selected the Grand Prize winner and a record 19,000 online votes decided the People's Choice award winner. Six other photographs capturing highway construction workers and citizens using transportation facilities in their communities also received awards.



Twenty-eight transportation department employees from 21 states and six private citizens submitted 121 photographs in the competition. The entries were judged in three categories: Building the Future, Opening Communities, and Taking the Road Less Traveled.



The Grand Prize was awarded to California Department of Transportation Engineer Martin Chandrawinata for his photograph of an iron worker using a cutting torch while suspended from the San Francisco-Oakland Bay Bridge.



The People's Choice Award was presented to photographer Bill Hall who captured California Department of Transportation Engineer Matt Bruce inspecting the cable band installation near the top of the San Francisco-Oakland Bay Bridge.



Hall's People's Choice Award photograph also won in the Building the Future -- State DOT category.



Building the Future -- Individual Winner: California State Route Four Construction through Contra Costa County -- photographer Karl Nielsen captured an unknown worker as he cut through reinforcing rebar in the concrete rubble of a demolished bridge on State Route Four in Antioch, Calif. The bridge was demolished to make room for the widening of the highway and the addition of a light rail system.



Opening Communities -- State DOT Winner: Inspecting a Traffic Signal -- photographer Cedric Mohr from the Georgia DOT captured this winning photograph of GDOT Signal Technician Bobby Bryant inspecting a traffic light in District 7 on the south side of Atlanta. GDOT maintains 3,280 traffic lights across Georgia.



Opening Communities -- Individual Winner: New River Gorge US 19, West Virginia -- photographer Michael Ruggiero, Jr. set out to document semi-truck drivers, a sub-culture of gritty characters that drive coast-to-coast on the Interstate highways. This photograph is from his book "Over the Road."



Taking the Road Less Traveled -- State DOT Winner: Icebergs from a Distance -- photographer M. Bailey Watson from Alaska DOT & Public Facilities, Marine Highway System captured this photograph of icebergs being investigated from the safety of the Fast Rescue Boat deployed from the M/V Taku.



Taking the Road Less Traveled -- Individual Winner: Grafton Bridge -- photographer Karl Nielsen captured cyclists riding across an old bridge near Grafton, Calif.



The photographs were judged by Connie Rus, an accomplished photographer and graphic designer based in Washington State.



To view all of the entries in this year's competition visit the Faces of Transportation blog at http://www.facesoftransportation.org.



The American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials (AASHTO) is the “Voice of Transportation” representing State Departments of Transportation in all 50 states, the District of Columbia, and Puerto Rico. AASHTO is a nonprofit, nonpartisan association serving as a catalyst for excellence in transportation. Follow us on Twitter at http://twitter.com/aashtospeaks.






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