Unnecessary road closures in Peoria county
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Unnecessary road closures in Peoria.
This seems to be happening a lot. Construction projects take a very long time, and they close the road for much longer than is actually necessary due to the construction. Police have been known to close roads minor accidents, such as a vehicle that went off the road and isn't blocking the road at all. Here is a picture of the 116/Harmon highway bridge over the railroad tracks and Kickapoo creek. It has been closed for 7 weeks now, along with Kickapoo creek road that goes under the bridge along the railroad tracks. The railroad is still open. The bridge itself hasn't actually had any work done to it yet. It is just closed and used to park work vehicles and construction equipment along the side. Kickapoo Creek Road just has an excavator parked on it. Most of the work so far has been clearing trees around the bridge and building a second bridge along side to use to work on the main bridge. The cost to drivers would be in the thousands of dollars per day, if people were paid minimum wage to drive around. Also, the areas of the bridge that are damaged due to rust are in the sections where the salt water drains from the road. 10 million dollars or watever is a lot to spend for a bridge just to save a few thousand every year for cheaper road salt that is corrosive instead of beet juice or something non corrosive. It has looked like this picture for 7 weeks now. Closed and nothing going on on the surface.
BoBandy and billybob reacted 
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Unnecessary road closures in Peoria. This seems to be happening a lot. Construction projects take a very long time, and they close the road for much longer than is actually necessary due to the construction. Police have been known to close roads minor accidents, such as a vehicle that went off the road and isn't blocking the road at all. Here is a picture of the 116/Harmon highway bridge over the railroad tracks and Kickapoo creek. It has been closed for 7 weeks now, along with Kickapoo creek road that goes under the bridge along the railroad tracks. The railroad is still open. The bridge itself hasn't actually had any work done to it yet. It is just closed and used to park work vehicles and construction equipment along the side. Kickapoo Creek Road just has an excavator parked on it. Most of the work so far has been clearing trees around the bridge and building a second bridge along side to use to work on the main bridge. The cost to drivers would be in the thousands of dollars per day, if people were paid minimum wage to drive around. Also, the areas of the bridge that are damaged due to rust are in the sections where the salt water drains from the road. 10 million dollars or watever is a lot to spend for a bridge just to save a few thousand every year for cheaper road salt that is corrosive instead of beet juice or something non corrosive. It has looked like this picture for 7 weeks now. Closed and nothing going on on the surface.
You are alone, There are lots complaints and concerns about that locations, No one seems too optimistic about that opening up any time soon,
We drove on Airport road down to Kickapoo Creek road about a week ago on the way to Pottstown. While stopped at the 3-way stop, it looked like there were workers under the bridge.
It's possible it took time to build a workers access bridge so rehab/replacement of beams and decks can be done. Construction season usually ramps up 1st week of March. I saw signs along I-474 going to Peoria saying week of Feb. 23, construction was restarting on that bridge near I-74 junction that was replaced last year. Except it will be the West bound lanes this time. IDOT will start work on replacing bridge decks on the WB McCluggage Bridge, and reroute WB traffic across new Eastbound span. Apparently that's why that span was built that way, and workers were busy last fall constructing ramps on and off. Those that complain about roads and bridges being built or rebuilt: do you also complain about the Illinois gas tax that pays for all or most of this?
It's possible it took time to build a workers access bridge so rehab/replacement of beams and decks can be done. Construction season usually ramps up 1st week of March.
If the company was charged $2000 for every day that less than two lanes are open to traffic ...
Ever think its closed because of safety/ structure concerns? Its being replaced for a reason.
On another note, railroads are notorius for holding up projects. They really dont care about a bridge or roadway. Could be a possibility
skutfarcus and DennisinPeoria reacted On another note, railroads are notorius for holding up projects. They really dont care about a bridge or roadway. Could be a possibility
Ever think its closed because of safety/ structure concerns? Its being replaced for a reason.
Those that complain about roads and bridges being built or rebuilt: do you also complain about the Illinois gas tax that pays for all or most of this?
They could impose a weight limit and close lanes and keep the bridge open.
DennisinPeoria : Do you think the government would let a gas station wait two years to pay them fuel sales tax that they collected?
@MadScientist : "The cost to drivers would be in the thousands of dollars per day, if people were paid minimum wage to drive around. " What????
What????
BoBandy : If 2000 vehicles per day spend 6 minutes having to go around the closed roads, that's 200 hours per day. At $15 per hour, that adds up to a cost of $3000 per day to the general public in the area.
The article in Journal Star in early January stated the "bridge cannot be stage constructed" because there is a 90 year old structure(truss) under the main driving lanes.
If one thinks about it, I'm guessing the work going on may be on the underside for falsework installation to protect the railroad when the bridge demolition/removal takes place. After all, it is a live railroad and ya just can't drop steel and concrete on it .One just doesn't see the activity.
And despite what seem to think, nobody is scheming to raise the gas tax or line someone's pockets.
Sometimes there is no other way to reconstruct without full closure. Case in point, the Murray Baker a few years back
CCubs, DennisinPeoria and mypeez reacted If one thinks about it, I'm guessing the work going on may be on the underside for falsework installation to protect the railroad when the bridge demolition/removal takes place. After all, it is a live railroad and ya just can't drop steel and concrete on it .One just doesn't see the activity.
And despite what seem to think, nobody is scheming to raise the gas tax or line someone's pockets.
Sometimes there is no other way to reconstruct without full closure. Case in point, the Murray Baker a few years back
@MadScientist :
But the road is closed and they already know that, don't they? They've already established an alternative. Do you think they drive up to the barricades several times a day hoping they're gone? LOL
But the road is closed and they already know that, don't they? They've already established an alternative. Do you think they drive up to the barricades several times a day hoping they're gone? LOL
Sometimes there is no other way to reconstruct without full closure. Case in point, the Murray Baker a few years back
Skimo : Which they should have done something different with the Fayette entrance onto I-74. I just happened to have my Waze app open the other day going through that area and got a notification that it was a "high accident" area. Great. It gets torn apart and questionably made worse.
Only probably $300-$400 million and 3-4 years of total closure thus you have what you have
Why are y'all defending this incompetence and carelessness? Zero work has been done to the bridge in 7 weeks, yet it remains closed to all except the occasional vehicle that drives around the barracades and the vehicles of the construction workers. Kickapoo creek road is closed as well despite zero work being done to the bridge itself so far. They have an excavator parked on Kickapoo creek road. They should park it in the grass and leave the road open. In the near future they may start doing actual work on the bridge and it may need to be closed. I get that. But they just can't be bothered with having it open until then even though it will have caused hundreds of thousands of dollars of increased cost to drivers. @Skimo : I don't have to guess. Zero work to the actual bridge has been done. Construction equipment is currently parked under it and a temporary bridge along the side is being built. The concrete spalling and other visible damage is only in the areas where water, and winter salt water, has run down from the roadway.
If one thinks about it, I'm guessing the work going on may be on the underside for falsework installation to protect the railroad when the bridge demolition/removal takes place.
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