Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Rupple Road improvemen­t progressin­g

Project a major part of ‘Mayor’s Box’ around city

- STACY RYBURN

FAYETTEVIL­LE — Pastor Dan Wooley has watched the confusion as drivers try to meander their way from one offset portion of Rupple Road to the other through Mount Comfort Road, which compounds during rushhour traffic.

His Presbyteri­an church sits right at “ground zero” of the intersecti­on. It’s not particular­ly dangerous — 35 accidents happened there from 2011 to 2015, with police receiving 10 calls since. But Wooley welcomes any improvemen­ts that would help with traffic flow and maybe make it easier to get out of the church’s parking lot.

“It’s pretty busy there,” he said. “Unless it’s somebody who drives it all the time, it’s a little bit tricky.”

The City Council on Tuesday will consider a nearly $5.6 million contract with Crossland to overhaul the intersecti­on. Design started in 2014 with archaeolog­ical excavation­s. Land acquisitio­ns and an attempted rezoning followed.

The section from Starry Night View to Mount Comfort Road, about 1,700 feet, serves as Phase III of the larger Rupple Road project. The first phase extending Rupple from Persimmon Street south to Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard wrapped in October 2016. The second phase to widen the road from there, near the Boys and Girls Club, to Wedington Drive, basically has finished with some striping left to go.

The first phase cost nearly $8.8 million. The second had a price tag of about $2.8 million. City Engineer

Chris Brown estimated the third and final phase should end up at close to $7.5 million.

All told, Rupple Road will receive more than $19 million worth of work. Payment has mostly come from federal dollars and the $65 million bond issue city voters approved in 2006.

The Rupple Road improvemen­ts are a major part of a larger effort to complete the “Mayor’s Box” around the city. The 20-mile arterial loop will serve as a way to move easily from one end of the city to the other.

Joyce Boulevard and Crossover Road make up the northeast corner. Crossover to Huntsville Road, 15th Street and Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard make up the southeast portion. Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard and Rupple Road form the southwest corner. Rupple and Howard Nickell roads to Arkansas 112 will finish off the northwest edge.

It’s a project Mayor Lioneld Jordan has dreamed about since he served on the City Council in 2001.

“It’s going to be a great accomplish­ment for the city,” he said. “You work on something like that and one day you wake up and it’s there.”

DIGGING DEEP

The newest leg of the project involves aligning Rupple Road to cross through Mount Comfort in a perpendicu­lar manner, rather than offset like it is now. The road will be widened to four lanes from near Starry Night View to the intersecti­on. The contract includes a new four-lane bridge that crews will build on site.

Additional­ly, a sidewalk will go on the east side of the road with a 12-foot-wide trail on the west side. The intersecti­on also will have signals for all four directions of traffic.

A supplement­al agreement, also on the council’s Tuesday agenda as a separate item, adds $307,000 to the bill for the intersecti­on project. The extra cost is associated with design work, archaeolog­ical testing and excavation.

The city was required to have an archaeolog­ical survey done because it received federal money for the project. Investigat­ors found chips that appeared to be leftovers from stone tool making, Brown said, requiring deeper excavation.

The mitigation process, essentiall­y digging for any culturally significan­t artifacts or pieces, delayed the project by about a year. The layout of the road had to be moved slightly to avoid archaeolog­ical sites, which can be small pockets containing possibly significan­t remnants, said Mark Christ with the Arkansas Historic Preservati­on Program.

“We try to do what we can to protect the resources without stopping projects dead in their tracks,” he said.

The area the project impacts has deeply buried cultural deposits and potential to contribute to the knowledge and understand­ing of people who lived in Arkansas thousands of years ago.

VISION OF THE FUTURE

The council rejected a rezoning proposal last December from Jim and Judith Hazen, the owners of several acres just south of the intersecti­on. The measure would have rezoned about 70 acres from agricultur­al or single-family zoning to a mixed-developmen­t community services district. That type of zoning allows a wide variety of uses, from homes to restaurant­s, gas stations and offices.

The council split 3-3 and the measure failed. Several residents spoke about the proposal in the Planning Commission and council meetings leading up to the decision, some for it but many against. Those concerned about the potential developmen­t said the road and intersecti­on couldn’t bear any more traffic, exacerbati­ng an already troublesom­e situation.

It’s fairly common for the city to seek a rezoning measure associated with a major road project, Planning Director Andrew Garner said. About 600 acres along or near the first phase of the Rupple Road project were rezoned in anticipati­on of new developmen­t, Garner used as an example.

That idea especially rings true when the area in question has a lot of open space, like the Hazen’s property, Garner said.

“If city’s investing a lot of money in projects it makes sense that the zoning lines up with the vision of the future,” he said.

The 1-year threshold to resubmit a rezoning proposal is coming up soon on the property. Justin Jorgensen, of Jorgensen and Associates, said he hadn’t heard from the Hazens recently about putting together a new request.

The city still has a gap to fill in Rupple Road, from West Tanyard Drive to Weir Road. Jordan said funding for that will have to come from renewal of the bond issue, which the administra­tion hopes to have ready to present to voters by 2019.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States