But, but the Deer Creek people need to get home sooner and not sit in traffic.
Putting this stretch of highway on Deer Creek people is pretty disingenuous. There is a lot of traffic going in and out that way, it’s the main road in and out from the city on the north side aside from I-35.
This project has been planned and the first part of it implemented for over a decade. They did the Waterloo section back when Deer Creek was still 2a. Sorry to burst your bubble.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Controlled-access_highway
Interchanges, not intersections.
Doesn't have to be spaced more than a mile, just the main lanes of traffic don't have to slow or stop at crossings. They are basically just expanding a city road at this point, not making into a real highway.
I am a believer in PT funding, but there are probably more people serviced by this section of road in a day than would ride the Heartland Flyer in a year. Looks like the traffic load is currently 32K cars per day. So ~40K people a day. I also rank metro infrastructure higher than vacation infrastructure.
Just to clarify: I wasn't trying to say that this project shouldn't have been built, and instead that money set aside for the Heartland Flyer. My point was to illustrate how comparatively little money is required to keep the Heartland Flyer going across it's full 206-mile route vs rebuilding 3 miles of highway, as a counter-argument to those who try and say that the train costs too much. The amount spent on keeping the Heartland Flyer going is a drop in the bucket compared to the amount of money spent on road projects. Additionally, according to ODOT, in 2016 the section of road under construction served 12400 vpd on average (or just under 21k people per day, assuming a national average of 1.67 people per vehicle [SOURCE: USDOT 2009 NHTS Avg. Vehicle Occupancy (Persons)]). Also, just like commercial aviation, the Heartland Flyer is much more than "vacation infrastructure"; Amtrak reports that only 55% of the passengers that rode the Heartland Flyer in FY2016 did so for tourism/leisure reasons. Just like with flying, there are many that ride Amtrak for business reasons too.
All of that said, I apologize for steering this thread away from the topic (even if it is tangentially related)... Let's get back to talking about the SH74 widening project.
You’re right, doesn’t have to be a mile. Could be more, could be less. Just using that as an example. Controled or limited access only allows entering or exiting the roadway at designated locations. The new section of SH74 between Memorial and 150th is controled access, ..... and is a real highway.
The bidding process should eliminate negotiating with ODOT for great profits. With incentives built in contacts to finish early and penalties for slow work, I'm not sure what you are talking about anymore - Unless you are insinuating there is bid rigging going on. If so, where?
Side note - appears they’ve broken ground on the town homes development off 164th just E of 74.... think originally going to be called Portland Pointe but can’t seem to find any updated info. Any insight would be much appreciated
From that map posted it looks like the 4 lane is completely on the Grove side of 74 from 178th to 192nd st. Any one know if thats accurate? If so, what would they do with current road and intersection in place at 192nd?
They are really humming along on this project. Although, the stop and go traffic at Danforth and Portland is just crazy. Pete, might be an interesting drone project when you aren't busy.
drove this road heading south today and man 164th needs an overpass very very badly ... ( as does 178th and 192nd)
seems like a big fail by odot when the did this project ..
YES. 74 is NO BETTER than driving any of the other arterial north/south roads like May, Penn, or Western because you have to stop.at.every.single.light. Not to mention people just go the same speed in both lanes so you never get to pass -- not that it matters because you hit all the lights. Oh yeah, already mentioned that. LOL. An absolute fail of the worst kind by ODOT.
The least they can do is time the lights N/S so you don't have to stop every mile.
I haven't been north of 164th on that road in at least a couple of years. Are they at least keeping the option there for creating a limited access highway situation? Meaning, are they building feeder roads and/or at least keeping curb cuts from sprouting? It may be a lot to ask, but if they aren't going to build overpasses and entrance/exit ramps right now, they could at least avoid having parking lots opening up directly onto that road.
As an aside, and I know they are different entities, but it boggles my mind that the state is proposing and moving ahead with these loop roads way out in the sticks while ignoring this highway. They are getting very close to the time when it will be too late to do anything meaningful here.
If I recall correctly an overpass is still on the horizon, but like a lot of ODOT project this route upgrade got cut into phases. However priority order or funding seemed to have changed as I think it has been on the 8 year plan more than 8 years, and is still not scheduled to receive the funds till FFY 2026.
I started exiting at 150th during the construction and now that it's finished, I still exit at 150th. I take that little service road to 164th and just shake my head at how far back the cars are stacked up at the 164th light. Ridiculous.
Also, exiting at 150th, you have to deal with the Northbound side road where there are TWO yield signs where the road and exit ramp merge, and they may as well be invisible. Most people don't even slow down or look, much less yield to exiting traffic. Then you have a ridiculously short distance to get to the right lane, if you plan to turn right on 150th.
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