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Published
on HamptonRoads.com | PilotOnline.com (http://hamptonroads.com)
Shortcut to paradise: Toll bridge to the Outer Banks
Corolla has
long been one of Currituck County's favorite - and most remote - Outer
Banks travel havens.
Getting
there requires making what is essentially a giant U-turn that can add
more than a hour's drive.
Those
familiar with the jaunt know that first you must drive south almost to
Kitty Hawk before crossing the Currituck Sound. Then you flip around on
N.C. 12 and head north toward Corolla, land of wild horses, a lighthouse
and isolated beaches.
After about
20 years of debate, state and local officials and environmentalists are
near agreement on a $659 million shortcut: a 5-mile bridge over the
sound that would link Corolla to a small town about a 40-minute drive
from the Virginia-North Carolina line.
State
engineers have partnered with a private construction group that will
lead the design, construction and operation, including toll collection,
estimated to be $8 each way during the peak season and $6 during
offseason.
A 2007
study estimated the bridge would draw an average of 13,500 vehicles
daily on peak-season weekends, with revenues of $7 million in its first
year.
By 2025,
traffic counts are expected to average 19,200 daily on summer weekends,
with tolls at $12 and annual revenue of $24.9 million. The state budget
includes $15 million annually in public money to help finance the
project.
A draft
environmental impact statement is due out before the end of the year.
Construction could begin on the bridge next year, with completion
expected in 2013.
Proponents
say the bridge will relieve congestion on U.S. 158 and N.C. 12 through
Duck, hasten hurricane evacuation, lower costs of construction in
Corolla and expedite county services there.
Most
elected officials - including North Carolina state Sen. Marc Basnight -
and residents in Dare and Currituck counties have supported the project
even before it was first put on a state highway plan in 1989.
"We need
that bridge bad," said Gene Gregory, a Currituck commissioner who has
pushed for construction more than 20 years. "We've been on the verge two
or three times before something has popped up to delay the thing again."
Since the
project's inception, state and federal environmental agencies weighed
its value versus its effects on the environment.
In 2004,
after a multiyear study, the state determined that widening U.S. 158 and
N.C. 12 would relieve traffic better than a bridge.
But a local
grass roots group, Build the Bridge - Preserve Our Roads, paid for a
study that determined the bridge would be better and cheaper.
In Aydlett,
a community of about 1,000 people without a traffic light or a gas
station, residents opposed the intrusion to their quiet neighborhood.
Aydlett sits on the shore of the Currituck Sound and is about 25 miles
from the Virginia border.
Last week,
state officials announced another option for the Aydlett side that
renewed opposition. To save $60 million, the new road would be on the
ground through the swamp with culverts to allow passage of water and
animals.
Toll booths
would be in Aydlett. Local traffic could use the new road to get to the
highway. Aydlett Road, the existing road, would be removed to allow
better water flow.
"That's the
craziest thing I've ever heard," resident Mike Doxey said. "I am
strongly against it."
Residents
plan to file a petition against the latest option, Doxey said.
Penny
Leary-Smith, an Aydlett property owner, also opposed the new option.
"When you
have people leaving that meeting in tears, that's wrong," she said.
Even local
officials who have supported the project all along don't like this idea.
"The Board
of Commissioners does not support putting that traffic in Aydlett," said
Paul O'Neal, a Currituck County commissioner. "That community would
never be the same."
Others warn
about traffic and crime flowing into Corolla as access becomes more
convenient.
"People
come to the Currituck Outer Banks because of its remote, pristine
nature," Corolla resident Barry Richman said.
Large
highway projects usually increase crime nearby, he said. Corolla already
has problems with break-ins during the off-season, but now criminals
will have easier access and more than one way out of town, he said.
Basnight
still supports the bridge even with the cost-saving measures, said
Schorr Johnson, a Basnight spokesman.
Public
hearings will be held on the options, said Jennifer Harris, an engineer
with the North Carolina Department of Transportation.
But these
objections are not expected to slow construction, Gregory said.
"I feel
strongly that it's going to happen this time," he said.
After the
earlier setbacks, the project nearly died in 2005 when the North
Carolina General Assembly assigned it to the state Turnpike Authority to
use tolls and a private-public partnership to speed up construction.
The
Turnpike Authority agreed in December to partner with a private group
headed by ACS Infrastructure Development, a subsidiary of a firm based
in Spain.
The ACS
partners, collectively known as Currituck Development Group LLC, are
also investors, following a pattern used in Europe.
Traditionally in North Carolina, contractors bid on projects already
designed by the state and make no financial investment.
Two years
ago, Basnight asked that the bridge include such Earth-friendly designs
as solar powered lighting, a bicycle and walking path made from recycled
plastics and a look that better blends with the Currituck Sound
environment. Those features remain options, Johnson said.
Once
completed, a new road would intersect with U.S. 158 about a mile south
of Coinjock, travel east around two miles through a swamp, pass through
Aydlett where the bridge would begin and go about five miles over the
Currituck Sound to Corolla. Toll booths would be placed near U.S. 158.
On both
sides, the bridge follows generally vacant areas and would displace
about 11 residences.
In Corolla,
plans include two terminus options, one near the TimBuck II shopping
center and the other about 1.5 miles north near the Corolla Bay
subdivision.
In
contrast, the four-lane Virginia Dare Memorial Bridge from Mann's Harbor
to Roanoke Island was approved by the state in 1996 to replace the
43-year-old William B. Umstead Bridge, which was previously the only
crossing over the Croatan Sound.
By 1998,
Balfour Beatty Construction, Inc. of Atlanta was awarded the contract
for the 5.2 mile bridge, the longest in the state.
Costing $89
million, the bridge opened in August 2002, taking seven years from start
to finish.
Jeff
Hampton, (252) 338-0159, jeff.hampton@pilotonline.com
Source URL
(retrieved on 10/20/2009 - 10:15):
http://hamptonroads.com/2009/10/shortcut-paradise-toll-bridge-outer-banks
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