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(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 crews came and they did
some patching on Duham Road (N.C.
98), and they scraped the
shoulders of the two-lane section of
South Main Street (U.S. 1-A),
added 2 feet of asphalt to each side –
and then they disappeared.
Not to worry, Andy Berry,
the assistant resident engineer for the
state Departmentof Transportation in the
Wake County office, said this week. Rea
Contracting and all its sub-contractors
and sub-sub-contractors will finish the
patching and resurfacing of the two
roads this fall.
“Currently we’re weighing
some options” for South Main, Berry
said. The five-lane section from Capital
Boulevard was partly widened at
different times by different contractors
as development occurred along that
street. Then last year the Governor’s
Moving Ahead program helped the town
widen the remaining sections.
“They kind of left us with a
rough and uneven edge,” Berry said. His
office is considering having a crew come
through and mill those uneven sections
to form a better, more even surface for
the final paving section. “We’re trying
to get the best product so it will last
a long time for the traffic we’ve got
out there.”
Berry said a patching crew
should be on the job within a week or a
week and a half
“We’re still there and we’re
coming,” Berry said.
DOT’s contract with Rea was
for the projects in Wake Forest plus 21
other roads throughout Wake County,
Berry said. “The contractor chooses how
he wants to progress through the
county.” One of the problems locally was
that someone marked the pavement on both
roads with dotted lines to indicate
where patching is needed. That led to
expectations the paving crew would be
right behind.
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, 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. |