The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

City to upgrade Ga. 124 intersecti­on jammed by traffic

Jackson Street and New Hope Road will get additional lanes.

- By Tyler Wilkins tyler.wilkins@ajc.com

Lawrencevi­lle will start upgrading a traffic-heavy intersecti­on later this year, which will give drivers a smoother commute through a central part of town currently plagued by bottle- neck traffic.

At a March 22 meeting, city officials gave the green light for an estimated $1.7 million upgrade to the inter- section at Scenic Highway (Ga. 124) and Jackson Street/ New Hope Road. The Gwin- nett city will construct two additional lanes and a larger turning lane to New Hope Road and an additional lane to Jackson Street, said Chuck Warbington, city manager of Lawrencevi­lle.

“That intersecti­on right now is the worst bottleneck we have in the city,” Warbing- ton said. “(The) additional lanes at the intersecti­on will push more cars through (it), both in the mornings coming out of the New Hope Road area and going back home into that area.”

Jackson Street currently has five lanes at the inter- section, while New Hope

Chuck Warbington,

Road only has four. The additional lanes on both road- ways will help keep traffic flowing and lower buildup, Warbington said.

Besides traffic buildup, the current intersecti­on also sees a high number of rear-end accidents, Warbington said. The Lawrencevi­lle Police Department reported 48 accidents at the intersecti­on in 2020 and has reported 13 so far in 2021, Lt. Jake Parker said.

The city expects to start constructi­on either late summer or fall of this year, Warbington said, hoping to wrap up constructi­on by 2022. Drivers may experience “short-term pain for long-term gain” with traffic delays or diversions through- out the constructi­on period, he said.

Lawrencevi­lle will front most of the bill, picking up the project in response to a windfall in special pur- pose local o ption sales tax (SPLOST) collection­s. The city expects Gwin- nett County to fund about $770,000 of the project, and the county will officially decide whether to sign off on the agreement in April, Warbington said.

“Because this was not a programmed project, a lot of folks don’t know that it’s coming,” Warbington said.

‘That intersecti­on right now is the worst bottleneck we have in the city.’ city manager of Lawrencevi­lle

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