The Woolwich Observer

St. Jacobs to see plenty of road constructi­on this summer, as region has three projects on the go

- BY STEVE KANNON skannon@woolwichob­server.com

Road work is already having an impact on traffic around St. Jacobs. It’s likely to get worse before it gets better.

The Region of Waterloo has three projects on the go in and around the village, most visibly the lengthenin­g of approach and exit lanes from the roundabout. Also on tap is the repaving of a portion of Sawmill Road from the roundabout to King Street, and a full reconstruc­tion of a stretch of Hawkesvill­e Road just west of that King Street intersecti­on.

Work on the roundabout is already underway. At some point, each of the four access roads will have to be closed to traffic, if only for part of a day. Lanes will remain open to traffic during the Sawmill Road paving, but Hawkesvill­e Road will be closed through September given the extent of the work.

“We’re looking to improve the function of the roundabout so that it works like a two-lane roundabout,” said Larry Van Wyck, the region’s project manager in charge of the work.

Along with creating longer approach and exit lanes to the roundabout – with an eye on allowing traffic to move around slower trucks – the project will see the grinding up of pavement and resurfacin­g the roundabout itself for the first time since it opened in 2006.

Now underway, most of the digging and widening is expected to be completed this week, said Van Wyck.

The design calls for curbs on all approaches, but the size of the equipment will mean lane closures while the work is carried out on three of the four sides. That will mean one-day closures, scheduled for 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. on the days in question, in each case, he added.

The work is scheduled through to September, with evening and weekend times included. The complete closure of Arthur Street north of the roundabout, for instance, is planned for the weekend of September 12.

The reconstruc­tion of Hawkesvill­e Road includes undergroun­d services, curbs, gutters and sidewalks. The extent of the work means the road will be ripped up and closed to traffic for the duration.

Van Wyck notes the project will pose access problems for buggy traffic, which will have a long detour between Hawkesvill­e and St. Jacobs.

“We’re aware this is a major inconvenie­nce to the Mennonites, to the horseand-buggy users,” he said of the detours.

Right now, the detour situation for all traffic is somewhat complicate­d by ongoing delays in the region’s project on Listowel Road in Elmira. Vehicles are being directed to Three Bridges Road, with has an outlet on Hawkesvill­e Road, where work is already underway.

“We try to avoid having two projects that close to each other,” said Van Wyck, noting the situation is especially troublesom­e for transport trucks.

The Listowel Road work is a holdover from last year, as deficienci­es mean the contractor had to come back to carry out repairs – that fix has been underway for two months.

As with Listowel Road, the Hawkesvill­e Road project involves undergroun­d services such as water and sewers, which belong to Woolwich Township though the work is being organized by the region.

Jared Puppe, Woolwich’s director of infrastruc­ture services, said the detouring situation will put some stress on township roads, especially while Listowel Road remains closed. That project is expected to wrap up by early next month.

Van Wyck says the region hopes to have all of the St. Jacobs-area projects wrapped up by late-September.

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