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Project
News
MON/FAYETTE
EXPRESSWAY IN ALLEGHENY COUNTY RECEIVES FEDERAL APPROVAL,
ADVANCES TO FINAL DESIGN
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and view a Copy of the Record of Decision >>
Environmental clearance has been issued
for the 24-mile project to extend the Mon/Fayette Expressway
system north from PA Route 51 in Jefferson Hills to Interstate
376 in Pittsburgh and Monroeville.
The U.S. Department of Transportation's
Federal Highway Administration (FHWA) signed the Record of
Decision for the estimated $2 billion project on December
7.
FHWA's action formally designates the North
Shore Alternative as the Selected Alternative and allows the
Pennsylvania Turnpike Commission to proceed with final design
and right-of-way acquisition. Final design, which includes
the drawing of right-of-way boundaries, is the detailed engineering
necessary to advance the project to construction.
"This Record of Decision represents
the successful culmination of 12 years of environmental studies
and preliminary engineering to identify the best route for
the Pittsburgh region's long awaited Parkway South,"
said Turnpike Chief Executive Officer Joe Brimmeier.
Brimmeier noted the Turnpike Commission
already has secured consultants for each of 13 final design
sections of the Expressway. Formal notices to proceed
will be issued soon to the engineering firms. Two additional
design contracts involving railroad relocations and toll facilities
will be advertised.
HDR, Inc., an international engineering
firm with an office in Pittsburgh, will oversee final design
work as the Turnpike CommissionØs design manager.
The Selected Alternative begins at Turnpike
Route 43's existing northern terminus in Jefferson Hills and
traverses West Mifflin, Dravosburg and West Mifflin again
to a new Monongahela River crossing from Duquesne into North
Versailles.
The alignment then splits, with a northeastern
leg linking with the Parkway East at Monroeville and a western
leg on the north side of the Mon River connecting to the Parkway
East at Bates Street to create a bypass of the Squirrel Hill
Tunnel.
The Monroeville leg of the project passes
through parts of East Pittsburgh, Turtle Creek, Wilkins and
Penn Hills. The western link toward Pittsburgh traverses parts
of North Braddock, Braddock, Swissvale and Rankin. City of
Pittsburgh neighborhoods along the alignment include Duck
Hollow, Hazelwood and South Oakland.
The Mon/Fayette Expressway from PA Route
51 to Interstate 376 is being developed to improve transportation
access to economically depressed Mon Valley communities, improve
mobility to job centers, support redevelopment of abandoned
industrial sites and neighborhoods, and relieve traffic congestion
on overburdened roadways in the study area.
Existing roadways on which traffic volumes
generally would be reduced because of the project are PA Route
51, PA Route 837, PA Route 885, PA Route 148, U.S. Business
Route 22 and Interstate 376 between its interchanges with
the new expressway.
The eight-mile expressway from Jefferson
Hills to Duquesne includes interchanges at Jefferson Boulevard
(the PA Route 51 connector), at Camp Hollow Road and Richland
Avenue in West Mifflin and Dravosburg and at PA Route 837
in Duquesne.
On the six-mile northeastern leg to Monroeville,
interchanges are planned at East Pittsburgh-McKeesport Boulevard
in North Versailles, Thompson Run Road and Old William Penn
Highway in Penn Hills, U.S. Business Route 22 in Monroeville,
and at I-376 in Monroeville.
The 10-mile western link toward downtown
Pittsburgh includes interchanges at Sixth Street in Braddock,
PA Route 885 at the north end of the Glenwood Bridge, I-376
near the Pittsburgh Technology Center and at Second Avenue/Bates
Street near the Pittsburgh Technology Center.
As part of the project, the Hays interchange
at the south end of the Glenwood Bridge will be reconfigured.
A Design Advisory Team (DAT) composed of
representatives of the community and local governments will
be established in five areas to help final designers refine
and finalize solutions to issues raised during the environmental
study phase.
DATs will be set up for Dravosburg, Turtle
Creek, the Braddock-Rankin-Swissvale area, Nine Mile Run (including
the City of Pittsburgh's Duck Hollow neighborhood), and Glenwood
Bridge-to-Bates Street (including City neighborhoods Hazelwood
and South Oakland).
"The goal of the DATs is to help us
design and build a highway that satisfies identified needs
for the project and addresses concerns of the communities
so that all stakeholders are proud of the final result,"
said Frank J. Kempf, Jr., Assistant Chief Engineer for Development
Projects/Programs.
Kempf added, "We will continue
our dialog with environmental resource agencies, FHWA and
PennDOT so that they can monitor the progress of final design
and efforts to minimize impacts. And we will remain receptive
to local municipal input."
Approximately $300 million is committed
to the project. In addition to the cost of environmental studies
and preliminary engineering, funding has been committed to
advance the project through final design and right-of-way
acquisition.
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