Date: Fri 24-Oct-1997
Date: Fri 24-Oct-1997
Publication: Bee
Author: ANDYG
Quick Words:
Mile-Hill-bypass-road
Full Text:
Work Continues On Bypass Road
(with photos)
BY ANDREW GOROSKO
Work is continuing in earnest on the Fairfield Hills bypass road, an east-west
connector planned to link Route 25 to Interstate 84 and to Route 34 to
alleviate heavy truck traffic in the town center.
Excavators this week mined large amounts of fill near the intersection of Mile
Hill Road and Oakview Road to improve the sight lines for motorists exiting
Oakview Road.
Workmen have cleared and excavated a swath of land extending from the main
entrance of the Fairfield Hills campus to the Pootatuck River in preparation
for constructing the bypass.
Huge piles of soil have been amassed across Mile Hill Road from Kent House, a
former residential building at the closed state psychiatric hospital.
To keep Mile Hill Road open while the bypass is under construction, workmen
have installed a temporary bridge over the Pootatuck River, near Oakview
Drive. Alternating one-way traffic over that bridge is controlled by a traffic
signal, flagmen, and police.
A key aspect of bypass road construction will be building a modern raised
bridge over the river. That structure will replace a former deteriorating
concrete bridge which workers removed before they installed the temporary span
recently.
David Anderson, an inspector for the state Department of Transportation, is
overseeing the $4 million project.
Mr Anderson said Wednesday some movement of buried utility lines will be
required.
Piles will be driven next week in preparation for building the new bridge over
the Pootatuck River, he said.
Traffic will be able to flow over the bypass road by the end of 1998. The
road, however, won't receive its final layer of asphalt until 1999. Also, a
clean-up project at the site and landscaping work will be done in 1999.
The new bridge now under construction over the Pootatuck River should be
completed in the spring of 1998, according to James F. Sullivan, commissioner
of the state Department of Transportation (DOT). During the coming winter, the
relocation of existing public utilities alongside the bypass road is
scheduled.
Although some gasoline contamination of soil near the Pootatuck River has been
found, it is not expected to delay the bypass road schedule.
An estimated 35 cubic yards of soil contaminated with gasoline has been
removed and stored elsewhere in plastic at Fairfield Hills, Mr Anderson said.
The material will be inspected for contamination levels and then disposed of
properly, he said.
Officials believe the rollover of a gasoline tanker truck on the on-ramp of
I-84 at Exit 11 in October 1986 is the source of the soil contamination. The
crash spilled 3,900 gallons of gasoline overall.
The bypass road project is unusual in that the connector is being constructed
in an area over the Pootatuck Aquifer, the "sole source" underground drinking
water supply for the United Water public water supply system.
As such, the state is taking special care to prevent contamination of the
stratified drift aquifer, including the installation of specialized drainage
structures to contain chemical spills, oil spills and stormwater runoff.
The long-awaited bypass road is being built as a result of a 1991 agreement
between the town and state which settled a lawsuit the town had filed against
the state over the construction of Garner Correctional Institution, a
high-security prison on Nunnawauk Road.
