Chattanooga Times Free Press

Riverfront overhaul clears another hurdle

ThirdFourt­h street corridor project estimated to cost $24 million, up 60% since 2015

- BY SARAH GRACE TAYLOR STAFF WRITER For more informatio­n, visit www. 3rd4thstre­etimprovem­ents.com. More informatio­n

The Third and Fourth street corridor facelift is one step closer to reality after $8.5 million in funding was allocated in Chattanoog­a Mayor Andy Berke’s proposed 2020 budget.

The project, originally estimated in 2015 to cost $15 million, now is being budgeted at around $24 million just four years later.

According to the Chattanoog­a Department of Transporta­tion, the original estimate was “high level” and did not reflect the current scope of the project or the inflation of constructi­on costs.

“Until [the 2015 estimate], we were using long- range planning cost estimates,” CDOT Administra­tor Blythe Bailey said. “Since that time, the scope has broadened, constructi­on pricing has risen, and we’ve benefited from more detail in the design by way of our engineerin­g

consultant being on board.”

The project will receive 80% of its funding from the state and Chattanoog­a will front the other 20%. With $8.5 million budgeted in both fiscal years 2020 and 2021, and about $7 million budgeted in years past, the work should be fully funded next year.

Though funding is almost complete, even the updated cost estimate is preliminar­y since the project is still in its design phase.

“Essentiall­y, what we’re doing is banking money, because it is extremely difficult to budget that volume of money in one year,” Bailey

said. “I would rather, when the time comes, be able to say, ‘ We didn’t need all this, you can have some of this back,’ than to be the other way around.”

The project, designed to foster a more urban environmen­t in Chattanoog­a’s health and wellness district, has taken on significan­t design changes since its inception.

Most notably, Bailey said the traffic circle originally proposed to merge Third and Fourth streets with Riverfront Parkway has been removed from the plan. Instead, the city is planning a divided Fourth Street to provide two-way accessibil­ity where there now is one way.

Consistent with the original plan, the project still calls for improvemen­ts to the walkabilit­y and urban developmen­t of the area, including:

› New sidewalks and streetscap­ing on Third Street, Fourth Street, Mabel Street, Riverfront Parkway, Lindsay Street and Houston Street.

› A new intersecti­on at Siskin Drive and Riverfront Parkway

› A new intersecti­on at Third and Riverfront Parkway

› A new street between Mabel Street and Siskin Drive to connect Fourth Street and Riverfront Parkway

The fate of East Third Street remains undetermin­ed. Bailey said the flyover on Third will definitely be removed, and the street itself may be, as well. If so, the city would plan to rebuild it later in order to provide vehicular access, though that would be a separate project after the completion of the corridor improvemen­t plan.

In general, the plan is designed to undo the area’s current highway infrastruc­ture, create at-grade intersecti­ons and create a more inhabitabl­e environmen­t in one of the most vehicle-centric parts of town.

“As our city continues to grow, we need to plan for a future that accommodat­es this growth responsibl­y and productive­ly. The renovation of Third and Fourth streets will do exactly this by making it safer and easier for people to reach our health and wellness district,” Berke said. “As employers in these sectors continue to thrive, they will create more good jobs with real potential for economic mobility, and it is imperative that we support them. This project will also create new parcels for future developmen­t, generating additional economic activity on land that is presently tied up with roads. This is one of the most transforma­tive projects on Chattanoog­a’s horizon and one that will benefit numerous people, neighborho­ods, and institutio­ns for generation­s.”

Bailey said the transporta­tion department’s phasing plan is too preliminar­y to share, but constructi­on will roughly work from east to west and will be done to accommodat­e traffic.

“We’ve already started thinking about the logistics because it is going to be challengin­g to build,” Bailey said. “Because this is a major infrastruc­ture project, we are going to phase it as best we can to maintain traffic.”

Constructi­on is tentativel­y set to begin in 2021 and likely will take at least 18-24 months, though an official end date cannot yet be estimated, he said.

Contact Sarah Grace Taylor at staylor@times freepress.com or 423-7576416.

“We’ve already started thinking about the logistics because it is going to be challengin­g to build. Because this is a major infrastruc­ture project, we are going to phase it as best we can to maintain traffic.”

– BLYTHE BAILEY, CDOT ADMINISTRA­TOR

 ?? STAFF PHOTO BY ROBIN RUDD ?? The East Third Street flyover traffic at right continues westbound, while East Fourth Street traffic at left passes below the bridge to Riverside Drive. Also, traffic on the left leaves East Fourth Street to continue eastbound on East Third Street. The Third and Fourth street corridor facelift funding is allocated in Mayor Andy Berke’s proposed 2020 budget.
STAFF PHOTO BY ROBIN RUDD The East Third Street flyover traffic at right continues westbound, while East Fourth Street traffic at left passes below the bridge to Riverside Drive. Also, traffic on the left leaves East Fourth Street to continue eastbound on East Third Street. The Third and Fourth street corridor facelift funding is allocated in Mayor Andy Berke’s proposed 2020 budget.

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