development and repair of the harbor structures is given in Table 7. 

 Juneau Harbor, Alaska 



31. Juneau is located in southeastern Alaska along the Gastineau 

 Channel, 900 air miles northwest of Seattle, Washington, and 575 air miles 

 southeast of Anchorage, Alaska. The city is accessible only by air or sea. 



32. Juneau Harbor includes Harris Basin and Aurora Basin. Harris Basin 

 was completed in 1939 and includes 11.5 acres protected by a 430-ft and a 

 1,540-ft breakwater. The adjacent Aurora Basin covers 19 acres and is pro- 

 tected by a 670-ft jetty and a 1,500-ft composite rubble-mound steel pile with 

 treated planking breakwater. The harbor is part of the Juneau-Douglas com- 

 plex, which also includes Douglas Harbor and Gastineau Channel. A chronology 

 of events related to the development and repair of the harbor structures is 

 given in Table 8. 



Ketchikan Harbor, Alaska 



33. Ketchikan is located on the southwestern side of Revillagigedo 

 Island in the Alexander Archipelago of southeastern Alaska, approximately 700 

 nautical miles north of Seattle, Washington, via the Inland Passage, and 760 

 air miles southeast of Anchorage, Alaska. The project includes the 11.35-acre 

 Thomas Basin and the 36.9-acre Bar Point Basin. 



34. The Thomas Basin project was adopted in 1930 and completed in 

 1932. The basin was dredged to -10 ft mllw and is protected by a 940-ft stone 

 breakwater. An 840-ft concrete cap was added to the crest of the breakwater 

 in 1933. 



35. The original Bar Point Basin was authorized in 1954 and constructed 

 in 1958. The basin includes 11.9 acres protected by a 1,100-ft detached 

 breakwater and a 700-ft south breakwater, both of rubble-mound construction. 

 The basin was expanded in 1979 by the addition of two floating breakwaters, 

 963 and 120 ft long. A chronology of events related to the development and 

 repair of the harbor structures is given in Table 9. 



Kodiak Harbor, Alaska 



36. Kodiak is located on the northeast shore of Kodiak Island on the 

 north side of Chiniak Bay in the western Gulf of Alaska, about 1,250 air miles 

 northwest of Seattle, Washington, 650 miles west of Juneau, Alaska, and 



250 air miles southwest of Anchorage, Alaska. The project includes an 

 11.7-acre basin protected by a 1,250-ft and a 780-ft breakwater. 



37. The original project included a channel, 200 ft wide by 22 ft deep 



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