County Takes Lead On Study Of Waterford Wires,
Traffic
Margaret Morton
More on this
effort »
Aug 23, 2002
-- A long-standing project to bury the wires and slow traffic in the
small, historic village appears to have finally gotten off the ground�at
least partially.
At a community meeting held at the Waterford Old School last week,
citizens heard the news that the Loudoun County government will become
the project manager for a feasibility study and cost analysis of the
proposal to realign all the extensive utility and telephone wires that
are strung along the tree-lined stress and place them underground;
install traffic taming measures to relieve pressure from increasing
commuter trips through the village; and amend worsening drainage situations
caused by constant road surface build ups on some of the hilly streets.
Previously, the project was to be managed by the Northern District
office of the Virginia Department of Transportation. The decision by
the county to take on that responsibility brought the welcome news
that the study will cover the entire village, rather than the smaller
area VDOT had agreed to survey for the $476,000 allocated to the project.
The Waterford Foundation, the Waterford Citizens and the Waterford
Elementary School Parent Teacher Organization all joined forces in
1998 to seek federal transportation enhancement funding for the bury
the wires tame the traffic project, which was originally expected to
cost up to $7 million. The groups have received T-21 funding of $476,000
towards the project over the intervening years, for which the county
provided the required match of $95,200 after a close 5-4 vote earlier
this year. The board authorized its use for the engineering study.
Eric Breitkreutz, executive director of the Waterford Foundation,
said the study is estimated to take about 10 months. The RFP process
will commence Oct. 1 or earlier, with bids to close by Oct. 30. The
contract award notification will be announced Feb. 18 after approval
by the board of supervisors� Finance Committee. Work will start shortly
thereafter and is expected to be completed by July 15.
| Home | Site
index |
| Waterford
history
| Loudoun
history
|
x