COLUMBIA — The city plans to spend nearly $1.3 million on two major sidewalk projects next year, using money from its Non-Motorized Transportation Grant from the federal government.
The first project would be a 5-foot sidewalk on the north side of West Broadway from Stadium Boulevard to Fairview Road. The council on Monday authorized the city to buy land necessary to construct the sidewalk, which will cost an estimated $545,000, according to a report to the council from Public Works Director John Glascock.
The location was chosen for the "volume of people" who use the area, chief engineer David Nichols said, adding that two apartment buildings and a church in the area generate much of the pedestrian traffic.
The second project is a proposed sidewalk/pedway on the north side of Stadium Boulevard between Providence Road and College Avenue. Glascock estimated in his report that the project would cost $726,000. The proposed pedway would be 8 feet wide, except between Maryland Avenue and Monk Drive, where it would expand to 10 feet. The expanded width would help to handle crowds on days when there are MU football games.
The council scheduled a public hearing on the pedway for its Sept. 21 meeting.
Nichols said the need to build retaining walls is one of the reasons the project will cost so much. GetAbout Columbia manager Ted Curtis said crews also will have to build the pedway at night because Stadium Boulevard is a major thoroughfare, and traffic would be lessened.
The pedway, which Nichols preferred to call a "wide sidewalk," also would require improvements to a number of the intersections along its route, further adding to the cost.
The pedway would function as a "good connector" to other GetAbout projects around MU and would make it easier to walk to sporting events, Nichols said.
Work on both projects would begin sometime after December, Public Works spokeswoman Jill Stedem said.
Columbia is one of four cities to receive grants from the federal Non-Motorized Transportation Pilot Program. The program, run by the Federal Highway Administration, provides $22.5 million for cities "to
help build infrastructure and establish national standards for public
awareness and willingness to use active modes of transportation," according to getaboutcolumbia.com.
E-mail
Print
Show Me the Errors
Comments
Why doesn't M.U. pay for their own sidewalks in that area? The sidewalk that needs real attention is the one from College Ave at Rogers to the BL 70 East overpass where the new B Highway 4 lane starts.
That stretch of sidewalk is a accident waiting to happen.
You people know that sidewalk in the old area of Paris Road.
Seems strange to me that GetAbout will use federal money intended to help all of Columbia by focusing on an area across from MU's Hearnes center, an MU dorm near Ronald McDonald's House, MU football game activity and an area of West Broadway which currently has little to no walkers, but an ample number of vehicles frequenting Walmart.
Hmm, Walmart and MU. Seems to be a pattern here.