Las Vegas Review-Journal

Work on Strip road project’s $40M phase to begin in July

- By Mick Akers

The next phase of a major multiyear Las Vegas Strip road project is set to get underway this summer.

The $40 million phase B of the now seven-phase project to reconstruc­t and repave a 5.7-mile portion of

Las Vegas Boulevard from the 215 Beltway to Sahara Avenue is slated to begin in July, according to Dan Kulin, Clark County spokesman.

This second phase will cover the stretch from the 215 onramp near Town Square to Russell Road near the Mandalay Bay.

The contract for Phase B, which is expected to take 450 days, was awarded to TAB Contractor­s at Tuesday’s Clark County Commission­ers meeting.

Phase A, which runs from near Sahara to Spring Mountain Road on the north end of the Strip, is expected to wrap up in September, Kulin said. That portion of the project is pegged to cost $33 million, with $9.4 million coming from the Southern Nevada Water District and $5 million from Resorts World for improvemen­ts adjacentto­itspropert­y.

The end of Phase A and the beginning of Phase B were delayed a few months from the initial project timeline because of unplanned barriers.

“On a project of this magnitude, it is common for unexpected issues to arise during constructi­on,” Kulin said. “On this project, there were issues with coordinati­ng constructi­on with the nearby property owners and utilities, conflicts with existing undergroun­d infrastruc­ture, plus the unexpected impacts from the pandemic.”

The project was changed from five phases to seven, but the overall timeframe remains the same as some of the phases will be carried out simultaneo­usly. The entire project, which began in late November 2019, is anticipate­d to be completed in May 2024.

Aside from repaving Las Vegas Boulevard, the project also includes water main replacemen­ts, adding an additional fourth lane where right of way allows, pedestrian enhancemen­ts, technology and infrastruc­ture upgrades to the traffic system, adding LED lighting and enhancemen­t to medians.

The water district also will replace its entire water lot system along the stretchofl­asvegasbou­levard.

As each phase is carried out, lane reductions will vary. During working hours, lanes could be restricted to as few as one lane in each direction. During non-working hours, the county hopes to have at least two lanes in each direction open to travel.

At peak, between 36,000 to 60,000 vehicles travel on the Strip daily, according to the county.

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