The project was funded by the
American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009. In April 2008, the Corps awarded a
construction contract to
Shaw Environmental & Infrastructure for the Lake Borgne Surge Barrier, making this project the largest
design-build civil works project in Corps history. It is highly unusual for a civil works project to be designed and constructed simultaneously. The expedited process was necessary, however, given the compressed time frame for achieving the 100-year level of
risk reduction in 2011. In October 2008, the New Orleans District Commander of the
U.S. Army Corps of Engineers signed the Tier 2 portion of the Individual Environmental Report (IER), which investigated alternative alignments and designs within the location range identified by Tier 1 and explained the impacts of these alignments and
footprints, construction materials and methods, and other design details. After the completion of the IER, a Notice to Proceed was issued to Shaw. In December 2008, the Corps held a
groundbreaking ceremony to mark the start of test
pile driving. A joint venture of Traylor-Massman-Weeks was awarded the floodwall subcontract by Shaw Group|Shaw Environmental & Infrastructure and construction of the barrier's
flood wall began on 9 May 2009. On 21 October 2009 the last of the 1,271 main piles was driven. On 29 August 2012 (the seventh anniversary of
Hurricane Katrina), the barrier was used for the first time, to protect the city from
Hurricane Isaac. By June 2013, all major construction had been completed. ==Construction==