Date: Fri 24-May-1996
Date: Fri 24-May-1996
Publication: Bee
Author: ANDYG
Quick Words:
DOT-bypass-FHH-bridge
Full Text:
DOT Explains Details Of Planned Bypass Road
B Y A NDREW G OROSKO
State Department of Transportation (DOT) engineers Wednesday night explained
aspects of the planned Fairfield Hills bypass road, a connector road that is
intended to improve east-west traffic flow through town.
The engineers spoke to about 25 residents in the Newtown High School
auditorium.
State Rep Julia Wasserman presented the meeting with a detailed chronology of
planning work on the road which is seen as a means to alleviate heavy truck
traffic through the town center. The bypass road will provide improved access
for motorists between Route 25, Interstate-84 and Route 34. The $3.6-million
bypass road has been designed for truck traffic. Through-truck traffic is now
banned on the Fairfield Hills grounds.
Carl Bard, DOT's principal engineer on the project, said a combination of
state and federal funds will cover project costs. The new road will bypass the
core campus of Fairfield Hills and link the intersection of Mile Hill Road
South and Mile Hill Road to the area where Mile Hill Road intersects with
Oakview Road.
The section of Mile Hill Road that crosses Fairfield Hills today doesn't meet
current design standards. About 7,500 vehicles cross the grounds daily. By the
year 2010, it is estimated that 11,000 vehicles will cross the grounds daily,
according to DOT.
Construction on the new road is planned to start in April 1997, provided that
planning for project proceeds smoothly. Completion is expected by October
1998.
Mr Bard explained that a key factor in how soon the road can be built is how
fast a new bridge to cross the Pootatuck River can be constructed. One-half of
the bridge will be built at a time, he said, requiring the need for a
temporary traffic signal there to regulate alternating one-way traffic,
according to Mr Bard.
Tim Gaffey, DOT's bypass project manager, said the section of roadway that
bypasses the core campus will be 36-feet wide, consisting of two 12-foot-wide
travel lanes and two 6-foot-wide road shoulders. The main entrance to the
campus will be narrowed from 38 feet wide to 16 feet and will only carry
one-way traffic into the campus from the intersection of Mile Hill Road South
and Mile Hill Road.
The intersection of Trades Lane and the bypass road will become the new main
entrance to the campus. The intersection will have turning lanes and a traffic
signal.
The section of the bypass road on the hillside between Nunnawauk Road and the
core campus will be wider than normal to provide climbing lanes for trucks, Mr
Gaffey said. The road will be 44 feet wide there.
The bypass road section between Nunnawauk Road and Oakview Road will be 40
feet wide.
Advanced erosion control measures will be used during construction and special
contamination traps will be installed there because the area lies above the
Pootatuck Aquifer, an environmentally sensitive area that holds the town's
designated sole source aquifer. The bypass road project is environmentally
significant since it is unusual to build a major connector road in a place
containing an area's designated sole source aquifer.
The new bridge crossing the Pootatuck River will be 40 feet wide. The
Pootatuck River will have a 60-foot-wide area to pass beneath the new bridge,
compared to the 20-foot-wide opening on the existing antiquated bridge.
No streetlights will be installed in the area and no road salt will be used
because of the aquifer's presence.
Robert Emmerthal of 7 Oakview Road said the intersection of Oakview Road and
Mile Hill Road is dangerous due to poor sight lines. He asked that sight lines
be improved there on the west side of Mile Hill Road.
Michael Osborne, head of the Pootatuck Fish and Game Club, a hunting area
which borders the bypass road, said the club, is seeking to work cooperatively
with the DOT in planning for road construction. The club's driveway onto Mile
Hill Road will be reconfigured in connection with the construction project.
A 1991 agreement, which resolved a lawsuit filed by the town against the state
over the state's construction of Garner Correctional Institution, provided, in
part, that the state build a bypass road across the Fairfield Hills grounds to
alleviate traffic congestion in the town center.
