Office of the Governor
Lieutenant
Governor Kim Guadagno
participates in
groundbreaking to mark the
end of traffic
signals on the Garden State
Parkway
(Trenton) – Lieutenant
Governor Kim Guadagno, New Jersey
Department of Transportation Commissioner
(DOT) James Simpson, Congressman Frank
LoBiondo and other elected officials
participated in a groundbreaking ceremony
today to mark the start of construction
on a project that will improve safety
by removing three traffic lights at
Garden State Parkway interchanges in
Cape May County — the only three traffic
signals on the 172-mile length of the
toll road.
“Traffic lights have no place on
a busy highway like the Garden State
Parkway, and there has been nearly
unanimous agreement that the lights
at these three Cape May County intersections
near the southern end of the Parkway
needed to go," said Lt. Governor Guadagno. "By
finally making this project a reality,
we will save lives. We will make the
Parkway and the local roads safer
and less congested for the people
who live and work in Cape May County
and for the citizens of New Jersey
and all those who depend on these
roads to get safely to their favorite
Shore towns.”
The groundbreaking ceremony was held
at the intersection of the Garden
State Parkway and Crest Haven Road
in Middle Township with the traffic
light at Interchange 11 as a backdrop.
After a program of speeches, ceremonial
shovels of dirt were turned to mark
the beginning of the construction
phase of the project.
The project will replace the traffic
signals at three at-grade intersections
with full interchanges. Bridges will
be built to carry the Parkway over
Shell Bay Avenue (Interchange 9),
Stone Harbor Boulevard (Interchange
10) and Crest Haven Road (Interchange
11). Ramps will provide continued
full access between the Parkway and
the local roads at all three interchanges.
Drivers on the Garden State Parkway
will no longer have to stop to let
local traffic pass, and drivers on
the local roads will no longer have
to wait at a busy intersection to
get to the other side of the Parkway.
“Three people have died in crashes
at these traffic lights just since
the preliminary design for this project
began in 2004,” said DOT Commissioner
and Turnpike Authority Chairman James
Simpson. “It's time to get this project
done and get those traffic lights
out of there. When a problem with
a wetlands mitigation site last year
looked like it might delay construction,
we promised to do whatever we had
to be in a position to award the contract
in December and get the work underway
by early this year. I'm happy to say
we were able to do that.”
The traffic lights have been in place
since before there even was a Garden
State Parkway. They were installed
when the former New Jersey Highway
Department built a bypass around Cape
May Courthouse in the 1940s. They
remained after the bypass was incorporated
into the Parkway when the toll road
opened in 1954.
The New Jersey Turnpike Authority,
which operates the Parkway, awarded
a construction contract to the Richard
E. Pierson Construction Co. of Pilesgrove,
NJ, in December. Pierson was the lowest
of four bidders. The total cost of
the project is $110 million, about
$15 million less than originally projected. The
project is being paid for with $32
million in federal funding secured
by Congressman LoBiondo and $78 million
from the Turnpike Authority's 10-year
capital program.
Construction is expected to take
about two years. The first steps
will be to relocate utilities and
to construct a temporary diversionary
road parallel to the northbound Parkway.
The diversionary road, which is expected
to be completed in about three months,
will carry Parkway traffic while the
overpasses are being constructed.
The New Jersey No Net Loss Reforestation
Act requires state agencies to replace
any trees removed during a construction
project. About 26 forested acres will
be impacted by the construction of
the improvements at Interchanges 9,
10 and 11. There is enough room in
the vicinity of the project to plant
new trees on about 20 acres. In addition
to planting those trees, the Turnpike
Authority will pay $382,500 to the
New Jersey Department of Environmental
Protection to plant and maintain trees
on an additional 6.25 acres of public
land away from the project area.
The project will also impact 4.62
acres of freshwater wetlands and 2.37
acres of tidal wetlands. To compensate
for those impacts, the Turnpike Authority
will spend $5 million to restore,
preserve or enhance more than 38 acres
of wetlands in Cape May County and
to buy credits in a wetlands mitigation
bank.
“This important project is one of
several major capital investments
the Turnpike Authority is making on
the Garden State Parkway in South
Jersey,” said Turnpike Authority Executive
Director Ronnie Hakim. “The Authority
is spending nearly $700 million, or
about 10 percent of its capital program
budget, just on projects in Cape May
and Atlantic Counties. That work is
creating jobs, relieving congestion
and making the Parkway safer.”
Other Garden State Parkway projects
underway or about to begin include
widening the road by one lane in each
direction between Egg Harbor Township
and Toms River; making major improvements
to the Bass River, Mullica River,
Patcong Creek, Great Egg Harbor and
Drag Channel bridges; removing the
Beesley's Point Bridge; replacing
the Bass River State Police barracks;
and building complete interchanges
at mileposts 41 and 44 in Galloway
Township, Atlantic County. |