Times-Call (Longmont)

Formal recommenda­tion for pillars sent

- By Andrea Grajeda

A Boulder County group has sent formal recommenda­tion to the Colorado Department of Transporta­tion for the Road of Remembranc­e gateway pillars be relocated to the northwest corner of the intersecti­on of Arapahoe Road and U.S. 287 in order to maintain their historical meaning and integrity.

Under a CDOT request, the Mitigation Working Group was made with local historic preservati­on groups to develop a preservati­on and potential maintenanc­e plan for the World War I memorial pillars. The gateway pillars are currently located at the intersecti­on of Arapahoe Road and the west side of U.S. 287. According to the letter sent to CDOT, the mitigation group has examined more than 20 alternativ­es for the pillars.

The mitigation group presented the northwest corner relocation alternativ­e during a public hearing for the pillars on Jan. 15. During that meeting, Bill Meyer, a member of the Boulder Rotary Club, said that relocating the pillars to the northwest corner of the intersecti­on would allow the pillars to remain close to the historic location and would be out of the way for any future Arapahoe Road expansion. Meyer also said that the relocation would be less visible and could cost more than a half million dollars. Last month, he presented three alternativ­es for mitigation and remediatio­n of the pillars, ranging from $150,000 to $750,000.

According to the letter, the mitigation group has spoken with the owner of the land in the northwest corner of the intersecti­on and the owner is willing to dispose of that tract of land in order to have the pillars there. That tract of land could then be transferre­d to CDOT, who could form an intergover­nmental agreement with a nearby municipali­ty. The group recommends that a local government, such as Boulder County, Erie or Lafayette, form an agreement with CDOT, in order for local officials to maintain the pillars.

At the January meeting, Meyer said that the pillars have been damaged. He said that the base of the south pillar is currently buried in 2 feet of dirt, after a change in traffic patterns for the intersecti­on. The letter states that CDOT conducted a survey on the new road design and found that it “diminished the physical integrity of the Monument” and “greatly impacted the integrity of the Monument’s historic setting.”

The working group also stated in the letter that funding for the relocation needs to be a top priority.

“The Working Group believes that it is incumbent on those entities who should have avoided impacting the Monument or protected it in 2019 and 2020 to now lead the way in funding

the mitigation plan,” the working group said in its letter to CDOT.

The working group said in the letter that this is not a way to blame others, but could be used as a chance to work as a community to save the pillars. The letter states that the urgent need for relocation of the pillars “resulted from the impacts created by the intersecti­on reconfigur­ation.”

On a phone call Monday, Meyer said that it would be up to CDOT to decide who funds the relocation. The group also said that if the relocation plan is implemente­d, they would be happy to assist with fundraisin­g for the project. The Working Mitigation Group is made up of local veterans, the Boulder Rotary Club, Historic Boulder, Indian Peaks Chapter of Daughters of the American Revolution, Lafayette Historical Society and other local historical preservati­on groups.

“The pillars are special to the community, and this is a way to not only save them but also potentiall­y enhance them,” Meyer said.

Meyer said that if the relocation recommenda­tion is not implemente­d, the pillars could collapse or be removed during future Arapahoe Road expansion. Meyer said that the pillars are not going to stay where they are now forever without maintenanc­e.

The Working Mitigation Group sent the letter to CDOT on Feb. 14, and Meyer said that there is no timeline for a response but he is expecting to hear back from CDOT in a few weeks.

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