Projo Report
New Pawtucket bridge plan draws questions
01:00 AM EST on Wednesday, February 6, 2008
By John Castellucci
Journal Staff Writer
PAWTUCKET ?— There were just a handful of complaints about the noise, traffic congestion and automobile emissions generated by the detour put in place when the state posted a 22-ton weight limit on the bridges that carry Route 95 over the Pawtucket River.
There was just a murmur of protest about plans to modify a key part of the detour by reopening Division Street between George and Prospect streets to two-way traffic.
What seemed to matter most to the crowd that gathered for last night?’s public information session in the Blackstone Valley Visitors Center was the aesthetics of the structure that the state Transportation Department plans to build as a replacement.
?“What does it look like now? What does the design look like now??” demanded John Speck, who writes a blog about Pawtucket and runs a small advertising agency.
When, asked Richard C. Davis, executive director of the Pawtucket Foundation, is the Transportation Department going to solicit public input about the design?
The more than half-dozen questions about bridge aesthetics seemed to catch DOT officials off guard.
Armed with computerized traffic models, roadmaps and traffic counts, they had come prepared to answer questions about the impact of the bridge replacement project, not the aesthetics.
?“Obviously, we want the input,?” said Jerome F. Williams, director of the Transportation Department, said, replying to Davis.
?“I will tell you, though, our resources are limited,?” Williams cautioned. ?“The federal government is not coming through with additional resources. They?’re coming through with less each year.?”
When Speck, who walks beneath the existing bridges on his way to work every day, demanded an elevation showing the design of the replacement bridge, Williams sought to assure everyone in the room that the new bridge was going to be built quickly, in less than the 5 to 10 years it usually takes the Transportation Department to build bridges.
But questions about what the new bridge will look like are a little early, Williams indicated: ?“Literally, we just got the design consultant on board.?”
Still, proponents of an aesthetically driven bridge project wouldn?’t be deterred.
Richard J. Blockson, general manager of The Pawtucket Times and The Woonsocket Call, asked the DOT officials to bear in mind that the new bridge will be a gateway, enabling motorists to cross the first body of water they encounter in the Ocean State.
Mindy Walker, an employee of a Cambridge, Mass., architecture company who lives in Pawtucket, told Williams, ?“Not to diminish the issue of resources,?” there were a lot of people in the room with the expertise to help.
The chairman of the city?’s Riverfront Commission, Richard Kazarian Jr., didn?’t speak, but, when the meeting was over, distributed a written statement:
?“Replacement of the Pawtucket River Bridge presents a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to build a landmark structure that creates a true gateway to Rhode Island from Massachusetts. Creating a symbol reflective of, not blind to, the community it passes over has the potential to liberate a city long burdened by thoughtless design.?”
By Attendee