Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Sain Street extension finished in Fayettevil­le

- STACY RYBURN

FAYETTEVIL­LE — The “extension” portion of the Sain Street project in Fayettevil­le is finished, but two more sections await completion.

The city recently opened an extension of Sain Street northeast to Vantage Drive to traffic. Constructi­on began in March of last year.

The 2,400-foot-long extension includes a 320-foot-long bridge over Mud Creek. Crossland Heavy Contractor­s of Columbus, Kan., and a local office in Lowell, submitted the lowest bid and were awarded a more than $4.3 million contract. The final constructi­on cost was a little more than $5 million.

Federal aid paid for 80% of the project, with about $4 million in total aid and the city paying about $1 million. The city’s portion came from a transporta­tion bond issue voters approved in 2019.

Public Works Director Chris Brown said the extension has been on the city’s plan for streets for many years. The idea is to provide an alternativ­e east-west route that will help divert traffic from College Avenue and Joyce Boulevard, the city’s busiest intersecti­on, he said.

As part of the extension, the city installed a roundabout where Sain Street formerly dead-ended east of Front Street. The roundabout will eventually link an extension of Hemlock Avenue south to Millsap Avenue and, to the east, provide access to an apartment complex in developmen­t from Lindsey Management.

That extension of Hemlock Avenue to Millsap Road and an overhaul of the intersecti­on with College Avenue and Millsap Road represent the other two pieces left in the larger project. The city hopes to start constructi­on on both projects at the same time, likely in early 2024, Brown said. Constructi­on should wrap by the end of 2024 or early 2025, he said.

The city wants to add a second turn lane on Millsap Road for cars heading east to turn left onto North College Avenue. The right-turn lane to go south on College would remain, as would a single lane to stay on Millsap.

Cars heading west on Millsap would have their own leftturn lane to go south on College. The lanes on Millsap also would be realigned to match up both sides at the intersecti­on.

“I think by making that eastwest route more efficient, we can squeeze a little bit more green time out of the College Avenue north-south leg and make that traffic move a little better,” Brown said.

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