Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Springdale plans another east-west traffic corridor

- LAURINDA JOENKS

SPRINGDALE — The city has started work on another road project to relieve traffic congestion.

An overpass of Interstate 49 will highlight the extension of Har-Ber Avenue east from North 48th Street to North Gutensohn Road, said Brad Baldwin, the city’s director of engineerin­g and public works.

The three-lane collector street will align with Har-Ber Avenue west of the interstate and with West Emma Avenue on the east, he said. The street will have one lane of traffic going each direction and a center turn lane.

The Har-Ber Avenue extension will give drivers a way to cross the interstate

and avoid its busy intersecti­ons at Elm Springs Road and West Sunset Avenue.

Traffic counts from the Arkansas Department of Transporta­tion show about 43,000 vehicles a day cross the interstate at Elm Springs Road. Another 76,000 cross at Sunset.

Constructi­on is estimated to cost $14.6 million, excluding costs for property acquisitio­n, design and moving utility easements, said the city’s contractor, Garver Engineerin­g.

This road project joins 16 others funded by $78 million dedicated to street improvemen­ts in the 2018 bond issue approved by voters. All but about $2 million has been earmarked for projects, said Wyman Morgan, the city’s director of administra­tion and finance.

Baldwin shared a map of the project during last week’s City Council committee meetings. The engineers have completed about 90% of the road’s design.

The plans show the thoroughfa­re will run along the south end of the bank of green space that runs to 40th Street. This will allow the city to avoid heavy electric lines of Southweste­rn Electric Power Co., which run along the otherwise undevelope­d strip of land.

The route of Har-Ber west of the bypass was altered for the same reason, said Mayor

Doug Sprouse. Moving those major lines on both sides would have added about $4 million to the project, he said.

That money could fund another small street project, he said.

“We all were looking for any trail east to west,” Council member Mike Lawson said. “We had no idea we could afford it. We thought we could get it just to 40th, but now we can go all the way to Gutensohn.”

“The city of Springdale is not alone,” said Tim Conklin, assistant director of the Northwest Arkansas Regional Planning Commission. “All the cities in Northwest Arkansas

are working to provide major corridors to connect their cities north, south, east and west to the rest of the region,” he said. “The Har-Ber extension is important.”

Conklin said there is significan­t traffic congestion on West Sunset Avenue in the mornings and evenings — and “any other time of day,” he quipped.

TOUGH DECISIONS

“A Carolina wren. I thought so. They’re the noisy ones,” said Karen Hill on Wednesday morning.

Hill watched the bird fly over her shaded yard on Angela Street. She’s worried

she will lose both her trees and the birds. Her family and another soon will become next- door neighbors with Har-Ber Avenue. Her house will sit about 60 feet from the road, and another home about 30 feet. These are the only properties directly affected, Sprouse said.

About 40 residences line the two-road neighborho­od of Angela Street and Paradise Lane, just southwest of the intersecti­on of Gutensohn and Emma.

Residents at Monday’s meeting said they were “blindsided” by the city’s plans.

The city in October 2019

showed a map of the proposed route during a public input session at Central Junior High School.

The map showed the extension taking a more northern route, preserving a few more feet of land for the property owners significan­tly affected.

Residents also thought the city had no immediate plans to build the road. Baldwin found a 1973 plot map of the Lindell Estates subdivisio­n showing West Emma Avenue extended to the west. Another look at the extension project was dropped in 2006 when the Springdale School District decided to build an expansion of Springdale High School across Emma.

The Har-Ber road extension came back before council members as they were prioritizi­ng the bond money.

“The Har-Ber extension is nothing new,” Sprouse said. “We were marketing the bond issue, but not this project. But it came up. When we looked at the bond money, we realized we would have the money to do this.”

Residents of Angela and Paradise streets said they like their quiet neighborho­od. The streets end at woods and pasture land that will become the thoroughfa­re. Residents expressed concern drivers will use their roads to avoid traffic congestion.

The city will build intersecti­ons where Har-Ber and the residentia­l streets connect, but they will remain closed behind a gate, Sprouse said. Those gates will come

equipped with locks only the Fire Department can open, he said.

“If we don’t make access for emergency vehicles, we are almost negligent,” Sprouse said.

The residents would continue to use McRay Avenue to enter and leave the neighborho­od. McRay provides the southern boundary of the neighborho­od.

Sprouse said almost every city project requires negotiatio­n with some property owners. But those discussion­s usually happen after the plans are finalized, the assessor has determined the property’s value and the city has sent an offer.

“We usually do it in the appraisal stage,” he said.

Steve Lisle, a lawyer who has represente­d homeowners on other city projects, said the process can be emotionall­y difficult.

“It’s hard even when city officials are trying to be sympatheti­c. Even just the constructi­on process can be very trying, when you’ve got heavy equipment in your front yard,” he said.

“But the bottom line is they are working for the greater good of the city.”

 ?? (NWA Democrat-Gazette/David Gottschalk) ?? Karen Hill stands at the corner of her property on Angela Street and West Emma Avenue as she describes Wednesday the impact on her property of the presented plans to extend Har-Ber Avenue. Go to nwadg.com/photos for a photo gallery.
(NWA Democrat-Gazette/David Gottschalk) Karen Hill stands at the corner of her property on Angela Street and West Emma Avenue as she describes Wednesday the impact on her property of the presented plans to extend Har-Ber Avenue. Go to nwadg.com/photos for a photo gallery.
 ?? (NWA Democrat-Gazette/David Gottschalk) ?? A section of Karen Hill’s backyard near the intersecti­on of Angela Street and West Emma Avenue will be affected by plans to extend Har-Ber Avenue east over Interstate 49 to match up with Emma Avenue at Gutensohn Road in Springdale. Go to nwadg.com/photos for a photo gallery.
(NWA Democrat-Gazette/David Gottschalk) A section of Karen Hill’s backyard near the intersecti­on of Angela Street and West Emma Avenue will be affected by plans to extend Har-Ber Avenue east over Interstate 49 to match up with Emma Avenue at Gutensohn Road in Springdale. Go to nwadg.com/photos for a photo gallery.

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