Chattanooga Times Free Press

LaFayette Road plan scraps raised medians

- BY MYRON MADDEN STAFF WRITER

Georgia state and Fort Oglethorpe planners once again have revised their proposed designs for the streetscap­e improvemen­ts planned for LaFayette Road.

The new adjustment­s for the one-mile project bring significan­t changes for the raised medians previously proposed, which the business community largely opposed.

Originally drawn as landscaped islands in the middle of the road to separate opposing lanes of traffic, the medians were meant to boost safety and efficiency by preventing drivers from making potentiall­y accident-causing left turns in the middle of highly trafficked city blocks, said planners from the Georgia Department of Transporta­tion, which is overseeing the project.

The new design removes most of the medians planned for the corridor, leaving only a short strip on the northern end of the project area between Gilbert Drive and Battlefiel­d Parkway near the Sav A Ton gas station, and another strip on the southern end between Enscore Street and Harker Road near St. Gerard Catholic Church.

“The removal of three of the five proposed medians should help ingress and egress to the 27 businesses along LaFayette Road,” said GDOT District Communicat­ions Officer Mohamed Arafa. “In the meantime, the installati­on of the northernmo­st and southernmo­st median should positively impact the safety of the corridor compared to the existing conditions.”

The modificati­ons come just weeks after business and property owners along LaFayette Road united in opposition against the raised medians shown in the previous proposal, fearing the medians would weaken their customer bases by preventing drivers from turning onto their properties.

With the revisions, Jack Goodlet, who owns Park Place Restaurant, said many of the business owners who’d voiced concerns are now content.

“We probably got 90 percent of what we were asking for,” he said, speaking for the group of more than 15 business owners. “We’re fairly satisfied with the concession­s we got, especially since they [previously] told us it was etched in stone and could not be changed, period.”

However, he added, the changes unfortunat­ely will not make a difference for drivers hoping to turn into St. Gerard Catholic Church or Advanced Eye Care, both of which will see the remaining medians installed nearby.

The anticipate­d date for the overall project’s completion is 2020.

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