Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Replacing of bridge scheduled to start

- MIKE JONES AND TRACY NEAL

BENTONVILL­E — Thousands of drivers will have to find a different route beginning today when work starts to replace Spanker Creek Bridge.

“Seven-thousand cars a day travel that route,” Benton County Judge Barry Moehring said. “We have worked with the city of Bella Vista and school district to get the word out that people need to go an alternate route.”

The bridge, which is on Spanker Road north of Benton County 40, has been repaired before so a new bridge will be built, Moehring said. Detour signs are already up in the area, he said.

Flooding damaged the bridge in April 2017 when the creek topped it and washed away the asphalt, leaving the concrete structure exposed. The pavement was replaced as a temporary measure.

The bridge is a 60-foot span on six box culverts. The new bridge will span 102 feet and raise the north and south approaches, according to the county.

Moehring expects the bridge to be completed in early May, but winter weather may delay the work.

The project will cost from $1.2 million to $1.3 million. Moehring credited former Benton County Judge Bob Clinard with getting a $500,000 grant from the Economic Developmen­t Council to help pay for the new bridge.

Leslee Wright, a spokesman for the Bentonvill­e School District, said officials have sent parents notices of the road’s closing.

The closing will affect five schools in the district: Cooper Elementary School, Jefferson Elementary School, Sugar Creek Elementary School, Old High Middle School and Barker Middle School.

Additional staff members will be at the schools for parents to drop off children earlier, Wright said. Chris Webb, the school district’s transporta­tion director, said staff members prepared for the project and developed routes last year.

Bella Vista Mayor Peter Christie said the bridge floods with nearly every big rain. The new bridge will mean residents can make their daily commute with more confidence, Christie said.

“We have been urging residents to examine alternate routes available and to plan ahead for this lengthy closure,” Christie said. “We ask our residents to be patient during this process and understand that the outcome will outweigh the inconvenie­nce they face now.”

Harold Klee has lived on Spanker Road near the bridge for 32 years. He’s seen the bridge wash out before and flood his neighbor’s property.

“It floods because a bunch of trees wash down the creek and acts like a dam,” he said. “They are suppose to raise the bridge by three feet, and it may stop the flooding.”

Klee said closing Spanker Road will be a small inconvenie­nce for him, but probably a bigger inconvenie­nce for Bella Vista residents who use the route as a short cut. Klee complained about the traffic. He remembers when Spanker Road was gravel.

“I’m going to enjoy it a few months without the traffic and speeders,” he said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States