http://www.winnipegfreepress.com/loc...261044911.html
Hwy. 59 interchange job to start
Long-promised connector finally coming: Selinger
It's been on the books since at least 1987 but has always stayed more a promise than a reality. Until now.
Premier Greg Selinger said the province will finally finish the interchange where Highway 59 meets the Perimeter Highway northeast of the city. Actual construction is to start in the fall of 2015 and be open to traffic three years later.
Selinger said what's different now is the province has the money to finish what couldn't be done before, thanks in part to the one-point increase to the PST last year. The government has said revenue from the tax increase will go toward major infrastructure projects.
"We have the resources and we have the commitment to build infrastructure and we have the public saying this is a priority for them," Selinger said.
The province says over the last decade the intersection has become the busiest in the province outside the city. The increase includes rising truck traffic and commercial and residential development in the area, including a proposed Walmart store on a 19-hectare parcel of land at the southwest corner of the Perimeter Highway and Lagimodiere Boulevard. Lagimodiere and Highway 59 are also one of the main routes for cottagers on the east side of Lake Winnipeg.
The project is part of five-year plan to upgrade Highway 59 to Grand Beach, including a new intersection at the Grand Beach turnoff currently underway, and will cost more than the $160 million that's already been set aside for the highway's improvements. The final price for the interchange has not been finalized.
"The interchange is huge from a safety point of view," Selinger said, adding it will include an "active transportation" component for cyclists and pedestrians -- not just cars and trucks.
"It makes sense to do it all at once," he said. "It's more cost-effective and it's more serviceable to the people in the community."
Public consultations on the interchange are to start this fall.
"It's the provincial equivalent of Confusion Corner (the Osborne Street junction) and it's going to be corrected and everybody should be happy with that," Manitoba Heavy Construction Association president Chris Lorenc said.
Lance Vigfusson, assistant deputy minister of infrastructure and transportation, said
the interchange will either be a cloverleaf design or a diamond interchange common on the U.S. interstate system. A full cloverleaf, similar to the existing cloverleaf interchanges at Highways 8 and 7, could cost as much as $200 million and a diamond interchange could cost about $150 million.
Busiest intersection outside of the city and they are even considering a diamond? C'mon...