Originally Posted by
Chris Gordon
I agree the bridge transitions are far from smooth, but I don't know that it's totally the blame of the engineers or construction teams. All of the bridges I can think of are blacktop leading up to the transition, then concrete, then back to blacktop. Also many of the bridges I can think of are at or near the bottom of a hill, think 15st just east of Coltrane. The concrete seems to hold up much better to Oklahoma Weather, so you end up with a situation where the to materials don't degrade at the same rate and end up causing problems at the transitions. The city budgets are generally tight, they are having to build and maintain sprawling road with only sales tax. So they are basically being forced to use an inferior product just to get work done.
Before we moved to Edmond seven years ago, I would drive through Yukon on my way to work. They had a huge road project on Cornwell from Vandament to 10th and replaced it with all concrete. I remember thinking wow, this must be a super expensive project, that's also SH 3, so I would guess the state paid a good portion, but that entire road is still seems as smooth as it was when they did the work about 10 years ago.
When I think about places that I would consider having generally good roads, the North Texas cities of Plano, Frisco, McKinney, etc. and most of their major throughfares are concrete (and even many neighborhoods). Now I realize that comparing Oklahoma to Texas is an unfair comparison in most regards. The Texas attitude toward roads seems to be build it once and build it right, perhaps we could try that... Now they also take FOREVER to complete a project...
To be fair to Edmond, Covell is all concrete from near Coltrane to I-35 and the new 2nd and Bryant intersection. We have good leaders, and I bet we see more of that over the coming years. Also... a general obligation bond vote would be great for Edmond.
Bookmarks