October 4, 2006

  Volume 4, Number 40

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.)

            Rea Contracting finally has arrived in Wake Forest to repair and resurface South Main Street (U.S. 1-A) and N.C. 98 (Wait Avenue and Durham Road).

            The company began repairing N.C. 98 last week and has moved to South Main Street this week.

            Right now, the work involves grading the shoulders of the streets where they were not widened earlier. Town Manager Mark Williams said the purpose is to provide wider lanes.

            The crews will patch all those areas on both streets outlined with white dotted lines and then totally resurface the streets.

            The work is expected to take about three weeks, and the cost on a state Department of Transportation contract is estimated at $362,000.

* * * *

            There is a bit of good news about the draft Transportation Improvement Plan (TIP) for 2007-2013.

Although letting of the contract for the third leg of the N.C. 98 bypass – from Capital Boulevard to Thompson Mill Road with a realignment of Falls of the Neuse Road – has been delayed from 2007 to 2008, the information about the project in the TIP available at the DOT web site is written in green. This is a distinction given to very few projects and means it is a “deliverable STIP project.” That appears to be DOT-talk for something they really do mean to build. The construction cost is listed at $16 million.

            DOT apparently also plans – though not in green ink – to continue a sidewalk project along underway around the campus, along Stadium Drive and along Durham Road. The cost is $73,000. DOT will build half a mile of the Olde Mill Stream greenway for $168,000 and begin construction of the streetscape project on South White Street in 2007 at a cost of $114,000.

            In addition, four bridge projects over Smith and Austin Creeks on different roads are listed in green but not scheduled for construction until 2008 or 2009.

* * * *

            The story for the U.S. 401 widening is dismal.

            Construction of the leg from Ligon Mill/Mitchell Mill up the hills to Jonesville Road has been delayed several times and now is being delayed again from 2008 to 2009. The cost is set at $8 million.

            In 2012 DOT plans to buy the right-of-way for the Rolesville bypass – Jonesville Road to N.C. 98 – at a cost of $2.4 million, but the $32.4 million for its construction is unfunded. There is also no money for the rest of the 18.5 miles from Raleigh to Louisburg.

* * * *

                        The web site for the U.S. 1 (Capital Boulevard) Corridor study has been updated. You can find it http://www.ncdot.org/~us1study.

            People at the July 27 public meeting in Living Word Family Church learned the project is estimated now at $400 million.

            Also go to http://www.ncdot.org/doh/

preconstruct/tpb/shc/studies/US1 for information about all the corridor studies underway in the state. A lot of local people use U.S. 70 from Raleigh to Morehead City, and of course it is a hurricane or disaster evacuation route. Although the Clayton bypass ($179 million) is underway and work on the Goldsboro bypass ($234 million) is expected to begin in 2008, none of the other bypass projects are funded.

* * * *

            As the Gazette reported recently, the estimates now for the Franklin Street roundabouts, median and landscaping have risen from the $2.4 million projected last year and included in the $9.5-million bond issue to $4.2 million.

            Finance Director Aileen Staples intends to sell $4.2 million in those bonds in September along with either $1 million or $1.5 million to widen South Main Street to either four or five lanes from Rogers Road to Forbes Road. A four-lane width would save on right-of-way acquisition costs but would mean a concrete median.

            O’Donnell has said the town may not be able to afford the entire cost of the Franklin Street project at one time, and the bids will be structured to allow the town to construct one section at a time. The project is part of the town’s Renaissance Plan.

            The increased cost, O’Donnell said, were mostly because of high oil prices.

            The engineers and staff at Kimley-Horne Associates are finishing plans for the street, incorporating ideas from the July 31 public meeting. The next step will be purchasing right-of-way and then sending out a request for bids.

            The other projects in the 2005 street bond issue were 1) construction of part of the North Loop at $3.3 million, 2) widening Stadium Drive to three lanes from Rock Springs Road to Capital Boulevard at $2.2 million and 3) building a sidewalk on North White Street from Juniper Avenue to Flaherty Park at $600,000.

* * * *

            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 recently. 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.

* * * *

            In the future, there will be at least nine sets of traffic signals on the 4.8-mile N.C. 98 bypass.

            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.

* * * *

            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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