Skip to main content

Pittsburgh Multimodal picks up ‘Mega’ funding

The Eastern Pittsburgh Multimodal Corridor Project was awarded $142 million from the federal US government’s National Infrastructure Project Assistance (Mega) grant programme.
By David Arminas March 7, 2024 Read time: 2 mins
The project will include resiliency improvements to a flood-prone area known as the Bathtub segment if the I-376 Parkway East corridor in downtown Pittsburgh (image © Bill H/Dreamstime)

Pennsylvania state’s Eastern Pittsburgh Multimodal Corridor Project – to make improvements in the I-376 (Parkway East) corridor - has been awarded US$142 million under the National Infrastructure Project Assistance (Mega) grant programme.

The federal government’s Mega programme, which was created by the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law and provides $5 billion in funding up to 2026, is focused on projects that are large, complex and difficult to fund under traditional grant programmes. It covers 11 such projects that will generate national and regional economic, mobility and safety benefits.

The Southwestern Pennsylvania Commission, which oversees federal transportation for a 10-county area, applied for the money on behalf of several agencies and governments, including PennDOT (Pennsylvania Department of Transportation) and Pittsburgh Regional Transit.

In Pennsylvania, the Eastern Pittsburgh Multimodal Corridor Project was awarded $142 million. The project will make multimodal improvements in the I-376 (Parkway East) corridor of Pittsburgh. The project will include resiliency improvements and reduce costly recurring maintenance by addressing a flood-prone area known as the “Bathtub” segment and landslides that often force emergency road closures.

The Pittsburgh project will also improve traffic management through dynamic lane use, dynamic speed limits, wrong-way vehicle detection and queue warning systems that are expected to reduce the higher-than-average crashes on the Parkway East.

In January, the US transportation secretary Pete Buttigieg announced more than $4.9 billion in funding from US president Joe Biden’s Investing in America agenda to 37 projects through two major discretionary grant programs - the National Infrastructure Project Assistance grant programme and the Infrastructure for Rebuilding America (INFRA) grant programme.

The INFRA programme, for which funding was increased more than 50% by the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, also funds large scale, transformational infrastructure projects — for this round of funding the federal government is investing in 28 projects that will improve the safety, efficiency, and reliability of the movement of freight and people in and across rural and urban areas. Over half of the projects being funded through the INFRA programme are in rural communities.

Apart from the Pittsburgh project, others projects are the Interstate Bridge Replacement Programme between Portland in Oregon state and Vancouver in Washington state. The project, which was awarded $600 million, will update Interstate 5 – an important north-south route - with a seismically resilient replacement of the I-5 bridge over the Columbia River. The bridge will have separate lanes for public and commercial travel. It will offer accessible and affordable transportation options such as bus lanes, pedestrian walkways, bike lanes and a light rail system to promote sustainable transportation.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Road improvement plan laid out for Canada’s Prince Edward Island
    August 1, 2019
    The Canadian Atlantic province of Prince Edward Island will invest around US$170 million over four years to improve roads, including resurfacing 270km of highways. Projects will include the replacement of 18 bridges, according to a statement from Infrastructure Canada, a federal agency through which the central government will funnel $83.5 million towards the work. The province will provide $86.5 million, noted the agency. PEI is one of the three maritime provinces and is the smallest province of Cana
  • Peruvian toll road 'environmentally sound'
    February 23, 2012
    The International Road Federation's Global Road Achievement Awards (GRAA) programme is a competition to honour and recognise road-industry projects that demonstrate excellence and innovation in road development worldwide.
  • Pittsburgh plans propose Parsons for bridge project
    January 9, 2014
    Parsons Brinckerhoff is handling the design contract for a new bridge in the US city of Pittsburgh. The new structure will replace an existing 89-year-old bridge on South Negley Avenue and the contract was awarded by the authorities in the City of Pittsburgh. The existing bridge carries South Negley Avenue over the Port Authority of Allegheny County East Busway and the Norfolk Southern Railroad. It carries around 15,000 vehicles/day and connects East Liberty and Shadyside. Originally built in 1924 and rehab
  • Ethiopia races on with projects
    June 13, 2012
    Ethiopia is pursuing a 10-year $2.4 billion development plan, part of which are ambitious road developments. Shem Oirere reports Ethiopia is hastening its pace towards accessing a share of the East Africa commodity market and opening itself up for foreign investment through the implementation of an ambitious road development strategy, the Road Sector Development Programme (RSDP). The landlocked nation has convinced a number of international lenders of the viability of RSDP, with some of them now loosening