The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

New express lanes: Relief if you pay

Project will shave time off trip, but some metro drivers aren’t buying it.

- By David Wickert dwickert@ajc.com

Imagine driving 30 miles on metro Atlanta highways at the height of rush hour — and arriving at your destinatio­n in less than an hour.

Imagine knowing your morning commute will consistent­ly take 45 minutes — instead of worrying that a fender-bender will snarl traffic and make it twice as long.

Imagine running late for work, but knowing there’s a wide-open lane of traffic that will help you arrive on time.

For commuters jaded by some of the world’s worst traffic, it sounds too good to be true. But Georgia officials say it’s already reality in parts of metro Atlanta and soon will be in Cobb and Cherokee counties.

The Northwest Corridor Express Lanes — set to open next summer — will stretch 30 miles on I-75 and I-575 northeast of Atlanta. State transporta­tion officials say the limited access “express lanes” will whisk drivers from Acworth or Canton to the Perimeter in minutes, even if traffic in the regular lanes is at a standstill.

The project is part of a planned 120-mile system of metro Atlanta toll lanes that state transporta­tion officials say will make commuting easier and more predictabl­e for those willing to pay by the mile.

That system already exists on parts of I-85 in Gwinnett County and I-75 in Clayton and Henry counties. Eventually, it will include the top half of the Perimeter and Ga. 400.

The $834 million Northwest Corridor is the longest leg of that system to date. And it’s already captivated motorists stuck in stop-and-go traffic.

“All the calls I get are, ‘When can we use them?’” said Stephen Lively, the Georgia Department of Transporta­tion manager in charge of the project. “People are getting excited.”

But the express lanes also have generated criticism. Some say they’re “Lexus lanes” that help only those who can afford them.

Love them or hate them, they’re a big part of the state’s plan to fight the region’s traffic congestion. And more are on the way.

A 30-mile constructi­on zone

Since work began in 2014, the Northwest Corridor Express Lanes have been constructi­on on a colossal scale. So far, the project has required 155,000 cubic yards of concrete, 300,000 tons of asphalt, nearly 5.3 million pounds of steel and a million feet of fiber optic cable.

About 400 people work on the express lanes daily — down from 900 at the peak of constructi­on in 2015.

“Thirty miles is not an everyday type of project,” said Oscar Romero, a senior project manager at HNTB Corp., a consultant on the project.

Most of the work north of the I-75/I-575 split is complete. But don’t expect to drive on any portion of the lanes until the entire project is finished. The express lanes are a closed system, and no part can be opened until all the work is done.

The project includes two new lanes on I-75 from the Perimeter to I-575. There will be one lane each on I-75 and I-575 north of their intersecti­on.

Like the I-75 South Metro Express Lanes that opened in Clayton and Henry counties in January, the Northwest Corridor lanes will be reversible. They will carry traffic into Atlanta in the morning and out of the city in the afternoon.

Motorists who use the lanes will have to have a Peach Pass and pay a toll. The price goes up as traffic increases. The idea is to keep the price high enough to discourage most people from using them — and guarantee traffic in the express lanes moves at least 45 mph.

GDOT Commission­er Russell McMurry said that guarantee will make traveling more predictabl­e. And he said you don’t have to use them all the time to benefit. If you’re running late to a meeting or your kid’s soccer game, the express lanes become more appealing.

“It’s truly an option that you can choose to use when you need to do so,” McMurry said.

When the lanes open next year, motorists who use them will be able to save up to 43 minutes, depending on the length and direction of their commute, according to GDOT projection­s. The agency says other motorists

also will benefit as more vehicles take the express lanes, freeing up space in the regular lanes.

A faster commute

Through October, motorist had taken 850,000 northbound and 890,000 southbound trips on the new I-75 South Metro Express Lanes. The State Road and Tollway Authority says northbound motorists moved 13 mph faster on average in the express lanes than those in the regular lanes; they moved 24 mph faster during the afternoon southbound commute.

Alan Moore, a Hawkinsvil­le resident who visits Atlanta regularly, has noticed a difference. He said I-75 traffic in Henry County has been “an unmitigate­d disaster” for as long as he can remember.

“The express lanes have helped that,” Moore said. “They have made travel times more predictabl­e and saved the stress of dealing with stop-and-go traffic.”

Others aren’t so thrilled. Alejandro Arteaga, a Decatur resident who travels across the region, said Atlanta traffic continues to get worse, not better. And he considers the express lane tolls — up to 90 cents a mile — to be “outrageous.”

“Only people with money or company vehicles can use these lanes,” Arteaga said. “I thought the highways were built for everyone and not for the benefit of a few.”

Like them or not, there are more on the way.

An extension of the existing I-85 express lanes is set to open next fall. Within a decade, express lanes also will begin to rise along Ga. 400 and the northern half of the Perimeter.

The express lanes are a big part of the region’s plan to fight traffic congestion in coming decades. New mass transit lines and other improvemen­ts also are included in the region’s longrange transporta­tion plan.

But don’t expect traffic woes to end. Even if the region builds every road and transit project in its plan, traffic is still expected to get worse as Atlanta adds another 2.4 million people by 2040, according to the Atlanta Regional Commission.

Still, state officials say the express lanes will help.

“This is not the complete answer,” said Joe Carpenter, GDOT’s director of public-private partnershi­ps. “But it is part of the answer.”

‘Only people with money or company vehicles can use these lanes. I thought the highways were built for everyone and not for the benefit of a few.’

Alejandro Arteaga Decatur resident

 ?? PHIL SKINNER / AJC ?? Workers prepare part of a bridge near Delk Road during a guided tour of the new Northwest Corridor Express Lanes. The most expensive highway constructi­on project in Georgia history is months away from completion. The 30 miles of tolled express lanes...
PHIL SKINNER / AJC Workers prepare part of a bridge near Delk Road during a guided tour of the new Northwest Corridor Express Lanes. The most expensive highway constructi­on project in Georgia history is months away from completion. The 30 miles of tolled express lanes...
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 ?? PHIL SKINNER / AJC ?? GDOT’s Stephen Lively explains plans for slip ramp access points before a tour of the new Northwest Corridor Express Lanes. State transporta­tion officials say the system of toll lanes will transform commuting in metro Atlanta over the coming decade.
PHIL SKINNER / AJC GDOT’s Stephen Lively explains plans for slip ramp access points before a tour of the new Northwest Corridor Express Lanes. State transporta­tion officials say the system of toll lanes will transform commuting in metro Atlanta over the coming decade.

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