| Home Page | Return to Previous Page |
Prince
William
Citizens for Balanced Growth Balancing residential growth with traffic, tax, local economic, school, and quality-of-life issues |
|
|
|
|||
| Supervisor
Stirrup e-mail on expected
completion dates of five western PW County road projects (24 Mar 2006) |
||||||||
| |
||||||||
--------
Original Message
--------
..Thank you very much for
expressing your concerns
regarding the transportation projects in Prince William County, especially
in the area of Linton Hall, Devlin, I-66, Sudley Manor, and Route 28.
1) Straightening and
widening Devlin Road -- At
this time the County has no funds available to widen Devlin Road, but through two other
projects, improvements to Devlin Road intersections are being
made. Through the Linton Hall Road project, the
intersection of Devlin and Linton Hall will be
improved. Through the Wellington Road County bond
project, the Devlin Road and Balls Ford Road
intersections with Wellington Road will be
re-aligned to make one intersection with a traffic signal. This
improvement
will help traffic flow through that area. This improvement will
be completed
later this Spring.
2)
Completing Sudley
Manor Rd. from Linton Hall to the 234
Bypass and then to Ashton Rd. in Manassas -- This project
is
currently
under
construction through the 2002 County Road Bond program. The
County is
extending Sudley Manor Drive from Chatsworth Drive, through
Route 234 Bypass, to Linton Hall Road. This will
be a 4-lane divided highway and is expected to be completed by this
Summer [or as now-former Board of County Supervisors Chairman Sean
Connaughton notes in a nearly identical message "by
November 2006."]
This project also includes widening Linton
Hall Road to a 4-lane
divided roadway from Devlin Road to Sudley Manor Drive.
3) Widening I-66 to eight
lanes all the way to Rte 29 in Gainesville --
This is a VDOT project. VDOT is currently widening I-66 to
eight-lanes
(including 2 HOV lanes) from Route 234 Business to Route 234
Bypass. This
project should be completed this Fall (2006). VDOT will also
widen I-66 from
Route 234 Bypass to Route 29 (Gainesville) to
eight-lanes (including 2 HOV lanes) this year. The project will
be advertised
for construction this Summer and will most likely begin construction
this
Fall. Project completion is anticipated in early 2008.
4) Widening Rte 28 to
four lanes from the 234 Bypass to at
least Vint Hill -- An interim
project is currently being
done by
VDOT.
This project will replace the Route 28 Bridge over Broad Run and will
widen
Route 28 between Hornbaker Road and Linton Hall Road to a 4-lane undivided
roadway. This interim project is due
to begin construction this Summer. VDOT opened bids on the Rt.28
Bridge
yesterday. The County has also proposed, as part of the 2006 Road
Bond
Program, the widening of Route 28 to a six lane divided highway from
Route 234
Bypass to Vint Hill Road relocated (including the
relocation
of the intersection of Vint Hill Road and Route
28).
5)
Widening Linton Hall
to four lanes from Rte 28 to Rte 29
-- Currently VDOT is widening Linton Halll Road to a six-lane divided
roadway from Route 29 to Glenkirk Road and widening to a four-lane
divided
roadway from Glenkirk Road to Devlin Road. VDOT has anticipated
completion of
this project by November 2007. As mentioned above, the County
(through the Sudley Manor Drive bond project) will widen
Linton Hall Road to a
four-lane divided highway from Devlin Road to Sudley Manor Drive. This project
should be completed by November 2006. Also,
the County is now working on expediting the widening of the remainder
of Linton Hall Road (from Sudley Manor Drive to Route
28).
Additional information on
transportation projects in Northern Virginia and, specifically, Prince William County, can be
found on my Transportation page on my web site at www.gainesvillesupervisor.com.
Also, at the bottom of my Transportation page there are a
number of links to
the County Transportation page and Virginia Department of
Transportation pages
for Northern Virginia projects.
Prince William County has long recognized
the need for improvements on these roads in order to facilitate safe
and
effective travel. These projects, as well as many others not
directly related
to these roads, are designed to alleviate traffic problems and
transportation
concerns in the Gainesville area. However,
projects of these
sizes take a long time and a significant funding to bring to
fruition. Some
proposed solutions are still being studied, other improvements are
pending
approval, and most projects still need additional funding.
I hope this clarifies the
County’s future plans to
address the situation. I assure you that the County is actively
studying and
addressing its critical transportation issues and is working with both
State
and Federal authorities for needed transportation funding and
improvements.
The most important difference we can make now is to get caught up on
our road
infrastructure.
|