Dayton Daily News

Fix to I-70 chokepoint in Clark County to cost $48M, take 3 years

Work to widen highway from U.S. 68 to Ohio 72 slated to begin Aug. 9.

- By Thomas Gnau Staff Writer

Sixteen years in the works and just days away from beginning, the $ 48 million widening of a section of Interstate 70 at Springfifi­eld promises to make the drive between Dayton and Columbus smoother and safer.

But first, there’s going to be some pain.

Randy Chevalley, director of Ohio Department of Transporta­tion (ODOT) District 7, talked about upcoming area transporta­tion projects at an I-70/75 Economic Developmen­t Associatio­n meeting Friday. Chevalley outlined what is considered the biggest project — the plan to add a lane in each direction of Interstate 70 in Clark County from U.S. 68 to Ohio 72 at the southern edge of Springfifi­eld.

Asked what he saw as the biggest project ahead for motorists, Montgomery County Engineer Paul Gruner — who also was at the associatio­n’s meeting — didn’t hesitate: “Probably that I-70 project ... between here and Springfifi­eld.”

“Everything will be at least three lanes between Dayton and Columbus once that’s done,” Gruner said.

“That’s going to be a big one,” Chevalley told listeners at a Sinclair Community College breakfast meeting.

Some 65,000 to 70,000 motorists use that stretch of I-70 daily, Scott LeBlanc, ODOT District 7 constructi­on engineer, has told this news outlet.

The 3.5-mile I-70 widening is slated to begin Aug. 9 with a September 2021 completion date. Traffic is to be maintained in two lanes in each direction during constructi­on.

Area advocates have pushed for the work for years, with many motorists regarding that stretch of the interstate as a dreaded chokepoint. Supporters also emphasized the work would make the area safer and enhance the region’s logistics business.

Springfiel­d is the lone area where traffic drops to two lanes in the stretch between Dayton and Columbus.

Work will include the replacemen­t of three pairs of mainline bridges, replacemen­t of a culvert and the installati­on of cable guardrail in the median, according to a letter from the Clark County-Spring field Transporta­tion Coordinati­ng Committee to the Dayton Developmen­t Coalition, advocating for funding in fiscal year 2016.

Once completed, the roadway section will have three 12-foot lanes and a 12-foot inside and outside shoulder in each direction.

The hope is that the new lanes will ease congestion, create more pavement surface and safer bridgedriv­ers and cut travel time for regional employers and freight shippers.

“This has been on the books for a long time,” Chevalley said Friday.

At one point, the project had been targeted to begin constructi­on in 2036.

Officials lobbied to change that, andwork had been set to begin in July 2019, but Clark County-Spring fieldTrans­portation Coordinati­ng Committee Director Scott Sch mid said earlier this year, ODOT moved the project up again.

The initial planning for the project began in 2002, Schmid said.

“We’ve been working on it phase by phase,” he said earlier this year. “It will be nice to get this one put away.”

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