August 9, 2006

  Volume 4, Number 32

Published in Wake Forest, NC

  Carol Pelosi, Publisher and Editor
 
 
 
 
 
 
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 Road Roundup

           (Road roundup is a standing feature of the Gazette, designed to keep people informed about the progress of the various street and road projects in town. New projects or updated projects will appear at the top of each week’s column in blue.)

            The North Carolina Department of Transportation plans to put up signs for a truck route through Wake Forest, Deputy Town Manager Roe O’Donnell said last week. The signs will probably be erected at the east and west approaches to town on N.C. 98 and on South Main Street where it nears the bypass.

* * * *

            We are one day away from D-Day (Drop-dead Day) for Rea Contracting to begin patching South Main Street (U.S. 1-A) and N.C. 98 (Durham Road and Wait Avenue) but aside from signs warning of work ahead, there is no activity.

            Rea has told O’Donnell they would begin the repair and repaving on or before Aug. 10; otherwise, the work will not be completed in the contract time.

            The work, estimated to cost $362,000, should take about three weeks, which means it will still be ongoing when Wake County’s traditional-calendar schools reopen on Aug. 25.

            The paint is getting faint on the pavement of the two streets, but the white dotted lines outline the areas due to be patched and repaired.

* * * *

            It has been at least nine months since state Sen. Neal Hunt persuaded the state Department of Transportation to install traffic signals on Rogers Road at the entrance to Heritage Elementary and Middle schools, but they are finally in place.

            They were still shrouded in black plastic last week but they should be operational soon, to the relief of a lot of parents. Mayor Vivian Jones and town commissioners vigorously lobbied for the signals.

* * * *

            There were comments but there was mostly sticker shock at the July 27 public meeting about the possible eight-laning of Capital Boulevard from I-540 north to U.S. 1-A north of Youngsville.

            The estimated cost today is $400 million – and with the cost of a barrel of oil at $73 or so, war and uncertainty in the Middle East that cost will almost surely rise.

            You can study the plans at your leisure by going to http://www.ncdot.org/~us1study.

* * * *

            In light of DOT’s slowdown in construction projects because the money is not stretching to cover them all, locally people may wonder about the status of the third leg of the N.C. 98 bypass. Mayor Vivian Jones said  recently there is no need to worry.

            The funds for the final section from Capital Boulevard (U.S. 1) to Thompson Mill Road come from federal government for surface transportation. “The metropolitan planning organizations have the authority to decide where that money is spent, and those funds are assigned to CAMPO,” Jones said. CAMPO (Capital Area Metropolitan Planning Organization) has designated those funds to finish the bypass.”

            Jones said she was very vocal about the designation for the bypass and keeps an eagle eye on it.

            That final section of the bypass will also include a realignment of Falls of the Neuse Road to meet Thompson Mill and closing a section of N.C. 98 (Durham Road) between Capital Boulevard and Thompson Mill.

            The construction contract is due to be let in August of 2007.

            In the future, there will be at least nine sets of traffic signals on the 4.8-mile limited-access road.

            We already have those at Jones Dairy Road and business N.C. 98 (Wait Avenue), those at South Main Street and the three sets at Capital Boulevard.

            Between Jones Dairy and South Main, there may be signals where Heritage Lake Road intersects but does not cross the bypass, and it is very likely there will be signals at the intersection when Franklin Street is extended into Heritage.

            To the west of South Main, there will certainly be signals when Ligon Mill Road is built to meet or cross the bypass.

            In the third section, we can count on at least one set of signals in Wakefield, another at the realigned Falls of the Neuse Road, and a third at Thompson Mill Road.

            Depending on the development of the land and whether the northern and southern portions of Siena Drive are connected, there could be another set of signals.

            If you want to keep abreast of local road projects, you can go to the town’s web site at http://www.wakeforestnc.gov/roadand

constructionprojects.aspx.

* * * *

                        One project – the new bridge on Stadium Drive – is scheduled to be completed on or before Aug. 24, the day before school opens. Balfour Beatty Construction is building the bridge over Richland Creek for $1.1 million. When finished, it will be 40 feet wide, wide enough for the three traffic lanes planned for the future.

* * * *

            A subscriber posed this question: Was it ever considered to turn the entire two-lane road around the seminary (Front Street, North Avenue, North Wingate Street, South Avenue) into a one-way road going all the way around the seminary? This would create a giant rotary, utilizing its wonderful benefits at each of the five or six major roads which feed into this group of roads today?

            Well, yes, that has been considered, but O’Donnell said it had been put on the back burner by a mutual decision by the town board and DOT “until we can see what effect taking the traffic on the bypass has.”

            DOT, in fact, had even constructed a computer simulation with smaller roundabouts at different points – the underpass, Wingate and North – and in one demonstration showed little bugs of vehicles running round and round at various speeds under various conditions.

            That simulation, however, only dealt with vehicles and did not touch the way students at Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary cross North Wingate constantly to get to and from the parking areas and the Ledford Student Center. “The pedestrians on Wingate have to be accommodated,” O’Donnell said.

 
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The Wake Forest Gazette
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