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Last grant needed to complete Hwy. 550 realignment is secured

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Saturday, Aug. 18, 2018 2:58 PM
The last grant needed to connect the “Bridge to Nowhere” with U.S. Highway 550 has been secured.

The final funding piece to connect the “Bridge to Nowhere” with U.S. Highway 550 has arrived in the form of a $1 million state grant.

The Colorado Department of Local Affairs awarded the $1 million grant Aug. 10 to help fund the long-awaited connection with the Grandview interchange, southeast of downtown Durango.

It’s a small piece of the $100 million price tag to complete the project, but notable at least in that it was the last part of the multi-faceted partnership of funding to be finalized.

In November 2017, the state of Colorado’s Transportation Commission approved the biggest chunk of funding, $54.4 million.

Through the Colorado Department of Transportation’s Region 5 project funding, another $29.9 million was thrown into the project.

Locally, the Southern Ute Indian Tribe pledged $500,000, and the city of Durango and La Plata County each pledged $250,000.

A FASTLANE federal grant added $12.3 million for the project.

David Valentinelli, an engineer for CDOT, said construction is expected to begin in 2020 or 2021.

“This is the biggest project this region has seen, so we’re definitely excited to make the connection to the interchange,” he said. “We really want to maximize the benefits of all the grants and funding being afforded to our region.”

To date, the interchange has cost $46.5 million, but was stalled and left incomplete after complications with the project, earning it the local moniker “Bridge to Nowhere.”

Drivers traveling back and forth between Durango and Mercy Regional Medical Center/Three Springs, however, have been using the interchange.

The new interchange is expected to better handle increasing traffic along the busy corridor, as well as remove the current connection through Farmington Hill, a steep incline.

jromeo@durangoherald.com

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