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View the online article...Transportation in the Twin Tiers: Interchange in homestretch
As Interstate 86-Route 15 project winds down toward summer completion, developers wait.
By Larry Wilson
lwilson@stargazette.com
Star-Gazette Corning Bureau
PAINTED POST -- Developers are watching closely as the Interstate 86-U.S. Route 15 interchange project at Painted Post nears completion.
"We've had inquiries for the past year," said Jack Benjamin, president of Three Rivers Development Corp. in Corning. "As this project finishes up, there will be more commitments made versus just looking at the site."
Benjamin expects several projects to get off the ground near the interchange in the next two years.
"They will be service businesses and a manufacturing/office type complex," he said. "There probably will be some retail, but given what is going on to the east of us, there isn't a whole lot of marketplace left."
Erwin Town Manager Rita McCarthy said contacts by potential developers have increased as the highway project nears completion.
"There is definitely increased interest," she said. "Folks are finally beginning to see a vision. We're going to start seeing site plan applications and concept plans and activity."
She said retail and service businesses have shown interest in the Town Center area, which includes the vacant former Kmart and P&C supermarket buildings.
"This highway project is the best thing to happen to this entire region in the past two decades," McCarthy said.
Benjamin agreed.
"As this thing gets cleaned up and all the access points get finished so people can see how this all fits together, we're going to have economic development around this ... for the next 10 to 20 years," Benjamin said.
After a brief shutdown that began at Christmas, work on the $145 million highway project is set to resume shortly, said Andrew Bertch, the 43-year-old engineer in charge for the state Department of Transportation.
Bertch said drivers will face some lane and ramp closures in April and May when milling and paving operations begin.
"They'll be relatively short-term closures compared with last season," he said. "It will be a matter of days or weeks as opposed to months."
The reconstruction of the interchange, which began in October 2003, is scheduled to be finished by July 31.
"The only thing that could be remaining (beyond that time) is some of the landscaping," Bertch said.
Bertch is pleased with the configuration of the interchange because it achieves the goal of the project -- to separate local traffic from through traffic on Interstate 86 and U.S. Route 15.
"A lot of mergers have been eliminated," he said. "Some were pretty tricky. I certainly don't want to go back to the old traffic circle. It's a lot safer than it was."
In an effort to minimize traffic disruptions, Bertch said, some of the more difficult remaining operations will be scheduled at night.
One of the major elements of the project yet to be completed are the Robert Dann Drive bridges over South Hamilton Street in Gang Mills, Bertch said. One takes southbound Route 15 traffic west and the other takes traffic eastbound from Chatfield Place to northbound Route 15 and eastbound I-86.
On both sides of the Robert Dann overpass, a cast concrete logging scene will give the bridge a local flavor.
There will be other aesthetic touches along South Hamilton Street, including decorative plazas with architecturally treated walls, decorated fencing, stamped concrete walks and benches.
"We have six more of those to do," Bertch said. "We've already done four."
Bertch hopes drivers will be patient for one more season.
"It seems like we're never going to be out of here, but we will," he said.
Bertch agrees with Benjamin that economic development will follow the project's completion.
"In my estimation, it's a certainty," he said. "We've done some things that will certainly promote business. We've made it appealing. Hopefully it works out for the area."