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STEELE CREEK NEWS

Projects Selected for Comprehensive Neighborhood Improvement Program

(November 6, 2015) On September 29, Charlotte city staff and consultants announced six projects that will move forward with further planning as part of the Comprehensive Neighborhood Improvement Program (CNIP) in the Whitehall/Ayrsley area.

The project locations are shown on the map below. To view a more detailed map showing the CNIP projects, click HERE or on the map.

The six projects are:

South Tryon Street/Whitehall Park Drive/Ayrsley Town Boulevard Intersection Improvements

Provide pedestrian improvements along the south leg of the intersection. Improvements may include striped crosswalk, pedestrian signals, and pedestrian refuge area within the existing median.

The intersection already has marked crosswalks with signals on the other three legs of the intersection. This improvement should be completed quickly as it should require little planning, design, and construction. This project will be coordinated with the Ayrsley Town Boulevard traffic calming. The estimated cost is $1 million, but this is a placeholder estimate in case additional lanes or other improvements are deemed necessary.

Ayrsley Town Boulevard Traffic Calming

Provide traffic calming measures along Ayrsley Town Boulevard. Traffic calming measures/improvements may include curb extensions, turn lane at theater entrance, restripe to two lanes, and on street parking.

Implementation of these changes may begin in 2016. Estimated cost is $500,000.

Sandy Porter Road Upgrades

Upgrade roadway from South Tryon Street to Williams Glenn Road with planted median, intermittent left turn lanes, curb and gutter, bike lanes, planting strip, and sidewalk on both sides of the road.

The picture to the right is an example of a two-lane road with a median and other improvements. To see additional pictures of example projects, click HERE or on the image to the right.

In 2016, residents in neighborhoods adjacent to Sandy Porter Road should be receiving information on community meetings where they will have an opportunity to provide input into the design of the improvements. The project could take up to five years to complete.

Estimated cost is $16.1 million.

Brown-Grier Road/West Arrowood Road Upgrades

Upgrade roadway from Steele Creek Road to Whitehall Park Drive with planted median, intermittent left turn lanes, curb and gutter, bike lanes, planting strip, and sidewalk on both sides of the road.

In 2016, residents in neighborhoods adjacent to Brown Grier Road and West Arrowood Road should be receiving information on community meetings where they will have an opportunity to provide input into the design of the improvements. The project could take up to five years to complete.

Estimated cost is $8.2 million.

Westinghouse Boulevard Sidewalk

Construct either sidewalks (6 feet) or multi-use paths (10 feet) along one side of Westinghouse Boulevard from South Tryon Street to Shopton Road West.

Planning for this project likely will occur after planning for the road improvement projects. Estimated cost is $4.1 million

Steele Creek Greenway

Construct a multi-use path and wayfinding emblems along Steele Creek from Westinghouse Boulevard to Steele Creek Neighborhood Park or Olympic High School.

Estimated cost of this project is $3.5 million.

However, greenways are the responsibility of the Mecklenburg County Park and Recreation Department, and the greenway trail would be built on county property or easements. In order for bond money to pay for this project, the wording of the bond issue would have to be written to allow expenditures of city money on county property. Alternatively, the city could encourage the county to increase the priority of this project among its planned greenways. The Steele Creek Greenway, however, is low on the county's priority list.

The Steele Creek Greenway could be one of the last CNIP projects to be started or may be dropped altogether. Although this project would not typically be the responsibility of the city, planners included it in the project list because it had significant support from the community, and they hope to work with county staff to make it happen.

Public Art

Approximately half of 1% of the cost of Charlotte capital projects is reserved for public art, so there will be artwork included in the roadways and other projects. Estimated cost is $180,000.

Steele Creek Road Widening

This project received significant support from the community, but since Steele Creek Road is a state highway, improvements are the responsibility of the North Carolina Department of Transportation and cannot be included in the CNIP.

Construction of a four-lane road with a median, sidewalks, and bike lanes along Steele Creek Road (NC Highway 160) between Shopton Road West and South Tryon Street is planned as part of the North Carolina State Transportation Improvement Program. Right-of-way acquisition and utility relocation is scheduled to begin in 2020, and construction is scheduled for 2022 and 2023. See Highway 160 Projects Approved by FHWA.

Alternate Funding and Adjacent Projects

When private development occurs, the developers typically are required to provide road improvements, which may include road widening, curbs, sidewalks, and left turn lanes. CNIP staff will coordinate with developers to ensure that improvements they make are consistent with the goals of the CNIP projects. Additionally, if private funding pays for some infrastructure improvements that would have been part of CNIP, funds may be freed up to add aditional projects to the CNIP list.

Rezoning was recently approved for apartments at the corner of Sandy Porter Road and Brown-Grier Road that will result in road and sidewalk improvements on adjacent streets. The city also recently announced a project to build some sidewalks on Brown-Griers Road and Gallant Lane between adjacent neighborhoods and schools. (See Sidewalks Planned on Brown-Grier Road and Gallant Lane (April 7, 2015.) These will be coordinated with CNIP projects planned along Brown-Grier Road and Sandy Porter Road.

Comprehensive Neighborhood Improvement Program Overview

Charlotte identified five neighborhoods across the city where it planned to make strategic investments to address a broad array of community needs as part of its Comprehensive Neighborhood Improvement Program (CNIP). One of these areas was designated "Whitehall/Ayrsley." It covered areas of northern Steele Creek located between I-485 and Westinghouse Boulevard. Over the next several years, the city expects to plan, design, and implement $120 million in proposed community improvements in these five areas, including $30 million in the Whitehall-Ayrsley target area.

Projects will be funded through Neighborhood Improvement Bonds. Voters approved the first $20 million bond in 2014. Additional bond issues are planned in 2016 ($40 million), 2018 ($40 million), and 2020 ($20 million).

At the first Whitehall/Ayrsley neighborhood meeting in March 2015, residents marked up maps with notes and stickers to identify areas where improvements to roads, intersections, sidewalks, trails, parks, and other infrastructure are needed.

At the second community meeting in April, project representatives presented a list of 59 potential projects and asked attendees to identify the 10 that they believed were the most important. City and consultant staff tallied the responses to identify the six projects that have been selected to move forward and presented these at the September 29 meeting. In some cases, projects on the list were combined (for example, road improvements, sidewalks, and intersection improvements along the same road). Click here to view the Public Meeting Boards that were presented at the September 29 meeting.

Where new apartments, single-family neighborhoods, or other development occurs along the project roadways, developers may be required to contribute towards project planning, construction, or other costs.

(Maps and displays that were presented at the September 29 meeting became available on the CNIP web site this week.)

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