Daily Press (Sunday)

Next phase underway in project to widen I-64

Planned upgrades will improve route between Hampton Roads, Richmond

- By David Macaulay

NEW KENT — Gov. Glenn Youngkin and other officials attended a groundbrea­king ceremony in New Kent County last week to mark the start of the Interstate 64 widening from James City County to the Richmond area.

Youngkin launched the $756 million I-64 Gap Widening Project, hailed as a measure to increase capacity and mobility, alleviate congestion, improve safety and improve connectivi­ty along the I-64 corridor.

The project will improve a 29-mile section of I-64 between Richmond and the Williamsbu­rg area where the highway narrows from three to two lanes in each direction. Highway widening between Newport News and Williamsbu­rg was completed in 2021.

The groundbrea­king took place Monday at the New Kent Rest Area & Welcome Center on I-64 in Providence Forge.

Work will begin this month to add a general purpose lane on the eastbound and westbound sides of a 10.7-mile stretch of I-64 just west of the Bottoms Bridge exit to just east of the New Kent Courthouse/ Providence Forge exit in New Kent County.

The project will be the first of three segments that will widen I-64 from four to six lanes from mile marker 204.9 in New Kent County to mile marker 233.3 in

James City County. When the project is completed, there will be no two-lane sections of interstate remaining between Richmond and Hampton Roads.

“Transporta­tion drives commerce, economic growth and connects Virginians across the commonweal­th,” Youngkin said. “Through continued investment­s

in our local and regional communitie­s, the I-64 Widening Project will help unlock the corridor to unify the Richmond and Hampton Roads regions and enhance job opportunit­ies and economic prosperity.”

Secretary of Transporta­tion Shep Miller said the I-64 corridor serves as a key connector between Richmond, Henrico, Hanover, New Kent, Hampton Roads and James City counties.

“Connecting the Central Virginia and Hampton Roads regions is critical to growing Virginia’s economy, and safety is an important component as well,” Miller said. “The I-64 Gap Project

will improve traffic flow and operations, including strengthen­ing our emergency evacuation routes and ensuring our communitie­s have a lifeline to safety.”

U.S. Rep. Rob Wittman, who attended the ceremony, described the I-64 Gap Widening as a “game-changing project for the communitie­s surroundin­g Richmond and Hampton Roads.”

The work has been divided into three sections of I-64, labeled Segments A, B and C. Each part will be constructe­d as an operationa­lly independen­t project.

The anticipate­d completion date for all three segments is spring 2028.

 ?? KIM O’BRIEN ROOT/STAFF ?? Work recently began to add a general purpose lane on the eastbound and westbound sides of a 10.7-mile stretch of the I-64 just west of the Bottoms Bridge exit to just east of the New Kent Courthouse/Providence Forge exit in New Kent County.
KIM O’BRIEN ROOT/STAFF Work recently began to add a general purpose lane on the eastbound and westbound sides of a 10.7-mile stretch of the I-64 just west of the Bottoms Bridge exit to just east of the New Kent Courthouse/Providence Forge exit in New Kent County.
 ?? ?? Youngkin
Youngkin
 ?? ?? Wittman
Wittman

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