Skip to main content

Key route widening for Pennsylvania

Work is now starting on the first construction phase of US Route 219 from Somerset to Meyersdale in Somerset County, Pennsylvania. The project will see the route widened to four lanes, with the work being constructed through three main contracts and taking an estimated five years to build. The project is expected to improve safety along a 17km stretch of US219. The work includes two new interchanges, one at the Mason Dixon Highway and the other at Mud Pike. The project was originally conceived in the 1970s
August 28, 2013 Read time: 2 mins
Work is now starting on the first construction phase of US Route 219 from Somerset to Meyersdale in Somerset County, Pennsylvania. The project will see the route widened to four lanes, with the work being constructed through three main contracts and taking an estimated five years to build. The project is expected to improve safety along a 17km stretch of US219. The work includes two new interchanges, one at the Mason Dixon Highway and the other at Mud Pike. The project was originally conceived in the 1970s but the planning was delayed until 1992 when 4907 PennDOT conducted a study determining the need for an expansion between the PA Turnpike in Somerset to I-68 in Maryland. The most immediate need identified was for the four lane Meyersdale Bypass project.

The first phase will be earthmoving, which is expected to cost US$121 million and will take three years to complete. This contract is being handled by the Joseph B Fay Company and requires moving around 7.85 million m3 of material, grading the roadway template, and installing the drainage for the majority of the 17km corridor. The second phase of construction is for structures which is expected to cost $92 million, will include building 10 bridges and should take two years to complete. The third phase will be the paving of the highway and is estimated to cost $53 million, with work beginning in 2016 and taking around two years to complete.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • East Africa drives towards road tolling
    March 18, 2016
    Road tolling is increasing in East Africa as the region’s countries expand highway networks - Shem Oirere writes. The drive towards road tolling in East Africa is gaining momentum. Uganda appears to have broken ranks with its neighbours to make huge strides in achieving progress with this innovative road financing plan. Road tolling has hitherto has been held back in East Africa for lack of political goodwill and State bureaucracies. Kenyan government officials have made announcements on planned road tollin
  • Four lanes for Estonia’s Tartu-Nõo highway
    March 9, 2022
    The 16.5km route in Estonia will be safer, according to Janno Sammul, head of the development department at the Estonian Transport Administration, Transpordiamet.
  • Stockholm Bypass project faces delays
    April 27, 2022
    The Stockholm Bypass project is facing delays.
  • South Carolina highway deal for Michael Baker International
    June 21, 2016
    Engineering and consultancy firm Michael Baker International will work on a major highway reconstruction project in Colombia, South Carolina. The project is intended to improve the commute for drivers in the state. The South Carolina Department of Transportation (SCDOT) has awarded Michael Baker International a US$8.8-million contract to provide construction engineering and inspection services for an 17.6km section of Interstate 20 (I-20) in Lexington County. The section of I-20 is a main artery into and