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Antelope Valley Project past halfway mark

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BY ALGIS J. LAUKAITIS / Lincoln Journal Star

Sunday, Aug 10, 2008 - 12:29:44 am CDT

Drivers already travel its roads, past Memorial Stadium and State Fair Park, and north to 14th and Cornhusker Highway.

Bicyclists pedal along its trails to and from the University of Nebraska-Lincoln City Campus.

Vandals spray graffiti on the wall-like pillars of some of its road and pedestrian bridges.

Story Photo
Construction work on the Antelope Valley Project near Vine Street looking south last month. (Michael Paulsen)

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The story so far: Antelope Valley Project

Antelope Valley is the biggest public works project in Lincoln's history. Read more about its background and latest developments. (Laura Meerkatz / Jo...

East leg of the 'Big T' intersection

Work is under way on the last roadway segment of the “Big T” intersection on the south edge of the State Fairgrounds. When finished in the summer of 2010, drivers will be able to travel from downtown, past Memorial Stadium and the fairgrounds, to just south of 27th Street and Cornhusker Highway. The 17th Street entrance to the fairgrounds is closed so the elevated roadway can be built. State Fair-goers should use the west or east entrances. Cost: $23.9 million

Y Street to Vine Street roadway

This segment of the Antelope Valley project is scheduled to open at the end of August. Vehicles southbound on 14th Street will be able to travel to Vine Street on the new Antelope Valley Parkway without zigzagging through the UNL City Campus. Cost: $1.1 million

Y Street to S Street channel

All of the excavation work has been completed and Hawkins Construction Co. workers have installed a low-flow channel liner and the retaining wall between the creek and the new roadway. Grading and grass seeding along the channel from the Vine Street Bridge to S Street still needs to be done. Cost: $13 million

O Street bridge

Drivers won’t have to take the serpentine detour near 21st and O streets this fall. The concrete deck has been poured and the bridge is scheduled to be done by Aug. 29, just in time for the Husker football season. Cost: $3.2 million

J Street bridge

This bridge, near Lincoln High School and the Lewis ballfields, is scheduled to be completed by the end of October. Its design will be similar to other bridges in the Antelope Valley Project. The project will include a relocated recreational trail and a wider channel. Cost: $2 million

Lewis ballfields parking

The parking lot near this popular recreational area is being replaced to make way for a wider creek channel. The City Public Works and Utilities Department is using several construction techniques to reduce runoff and improve water quality, said senior engineer Ben Higgins. They include: porous pavement, which allows water to infiltrate the ground and eventually into the storm sewer system; rain gardens in medians to temporarily capture rain; and grass pavers made up of a web-like cellular structure that allows grass to grow but protects the root system from vehicles. The project is in its final stages and should be done soon. Cost: $600,000

Channel work south of S Street to J Street

Demolition of a few remaining buildings will need to be done before workers begin digging the channel south past S Street. Workers should be under the P and Q street bridges by the end of the year, according to Glenn Johnson, a member of the Joint Antelope Valley Authority board. Channel work to just past the J Street bridge should be finished by December 2009, marking the end of all channel construction. Cost: $12.9 million

The $241.6 million Antelope Valley Project, now in its fifth year of construction, is being used in good and not-so-good ways.

It’s possible the vandals don’t know what they are defacing. Their target may look like a maze of new roads, bridges and concrete- and grass-lined channels and nothing more.

That’s not a big surprise.

Despite years of media coverage, hundreds of public meetings, bus and bike tours, and a Web site highlighting construction, some people still haven’t got a clue about what is happening on the east edge of Lincoln’s downtown.

“It does somewhat amaze me, but it also makes me happy because what that means is that things have gone quite smoothly for a project of this magnitude,” said Wayne Teten, who will retire Oct. 10 as the city’s Antelope Valley project manager.

Antelope Valley is the biggest public works project in Lincoln’s history.

Its basic goals are to expand the flood plain of the creek that bears its name so it can handle a 100-year flood, improve traffic flow from downtown to 27th and Cornhusker and near UNL City Campus, and revitalize several inner-city neighborhoods with new housing and businesses and community improvements such as the proposed $7 million Union Plaza Park.

People who live or drive through the area are more aware of what’s going on than those who have no reason to visit that part of the city, said Glenn Johnson, general manager of the Lower Platte South Natural Resources District and a member of the Joint Antelope Valley Authority, the group overseeing the project. The city and the university are the other two JAVA partners.

Teten and Johnson said Antelope Valley, whose construction began near the State Fair Park, will become more visible this fall as it begins to move closer to the core of downtown.

Seven components of the project  the most ever undertaken in one year  are in various stages of construction and some, like the O Street bridge and a new roadway segment from Y to Vine streets, will be open by the end of  August.

“It (Antelope Valley) will become real visible then, whether you’re driving down O Street or coming up Capitol Parkway,” Johnson said.

By the end of the year a new channel will be carved south of Trago Park and under the P Street and Q Street bridges. Those spans now sit on ground. Eventually, the channel work will extend south to just past J Street, where a new bridge is under construction.

So far, $150 million has been spent on the project, Teten said. Construction is about 60 percent complete. Most of the project  except for a bridge replacement near 38th and South  should be finished in 2011.

“Considering the weather we’ve had it’s amazing that they’ve made this kind of progress,” Teten said.

Walking the recreational trail along Antelope Creek is one of the best ways to see where the money was spent  and what’s been done so far.

It’s also a good way to talk to people using the project or whose lives have been changed since construction began in 2003.

Massive retaining walls  decorated with oak and maple leaves, nautilus shells, and aggregate to resemble an ancient seabed  are the most visible feature of the project. There’s a wide, weedy channel, too, and rust-colored pedestrian and railroad bridges.

“If you look at the Antelope Valley Project and the State Fair moving, it looks like the University of Nebraska is doing a land grab and getting a highway system to meet their needs,” said Larry Nelson of 1427 Dakota St.

Nelson recently stopped by the relocated home of Mike Morosin, a citizen activist and longtime opponent of the Antelope Valley Project.

At considerable cost, the city moved Morosin out of the Malone Neighborhood to 1500 N. 15th St. and rented storage units for many of his possessions. His stuff now covers most of his yard and an adjacent lot that backs up to the Antelope Valley Parkway.

Morosin’s red house, with its candy-striped awnings, is almost right across the street from “The Triplets,” three historic homes preserved and moved by the city at a cost of $630,000.

Nelson’s main concern is how the city is going to maintain such a big public works project for years to come when it has a problem keeping the grass mowed in its parks and is cutting hours at city swimming pools now.

“John Q. Public is on a fixed income year after year and we have to pick up the cost,” he added.

Teten said the city is also concerned about the project’s future maintenance costs, like taking care of the medians, mowing grass and removing graffiti. No figure was available, but he said some of the money will come from endowments and private donations.

Despite such concerns, Nelson believes the project is “looking really good” and is going to be a beautiful addition to the city.

Hayden Perez, an assistant coach of UNL’s women’s tennis team, has been riding his bicycle on the Antelope Valley trail system for the past year. He finds it’s a great way to get from the Devaney Sports Center to the UNL City Campus and helps him save on gas.

Asked what he thinks the impact of Antelope Valley will be on Lincoln, he replied: “I think it’s yet to be seen. Only time will tell if it’s worth it.”

Perez likes the new railroad bridge. It has eliminated traffic delays of up to 20 minutes, he said. He is also looking forward to the completion of the east leg of the Big T intersection, which will take vehicles from downtown to just south of 27th Street and Cornhusker Highway.

Unlike Nelson, Perez doesn’t believe the Antelope Valley is part of a university land grab. The project is necessary, he said, and will make a big difference traffic-wise on football Saturdays.

An estimated 40,000 vehicles daily will use the new Antelope Valley Roadway, Teten said.

Forty-four homes and 19 businesses were purchased to make way for the Antelope Valley Project, Teten said, and five businesses remain to be bought.

When the project is completed, Teten said, 800 homes and 200 businesses will no longer be in the flood-threatened area.

Gary Blattert, president and one of the owners of Carter Lumber Co., 1900 R St., believes the project is being built to benefit the university, so it can have more land to build research centers. He also believes it will give the university a more direct traffic route from Interstate 80 to Memorial Stadium.

“They should have given the people of Lincoln the right to vote for it,” Blattert said. “A lot of folks don’t even know what’s going on.”

Carter Lumber will soon move its store and warehouse to 1235 W. O St. It plans to use a building now leased to an auto dealer and build three new buildings. One is already completed. The owners have until February to relocate.

“It was a waste of money. I don’t see how it’s bettering anything,” said Derek Blaser, also a co-owner of the lumber company. “I don’t see where they’re going to accomplish a lot in what they are doing and the amount of people they put out and businesses interrupted.”

Blaser said the lumber company has a 65-year history of serving customers near downtown. He said moving farther west will affect their business because they will lose their central location.

Blattert said the city gave the owners $1 million to move but it will cost them $1 million more “to do what we have to do.” He said the drop in new home construction and a tough economy doesn’t help business.

Craig Gerdts, manager of Mum’s Liquor at 2202 O St., has had a cat bird’s seat for the Antelope Valley Project.

He’s watched construction of the Q and P streets bridges and now the O Street bridge, which when finished, will be near his doorstep.

He said construction has hurt business and he looks forward to it being done.

“I think the project will be very nice when it’s done,” Gerdts said.

Reach Algis J. Laukaitis at (402) 473-7243 or alaukaitis@journalstar.com.


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dewboy wrote on August 10, 2008 1:46 am:
" UNL great land grab is what it should be called. "

Why complain wrote on August 10, 2008 7:25 am:
" There is no use in complaining about this project ,the state fair or anything else that is done for UNL,they will do it.I have 2 more years in this town and see-ya.Dont complain,just move away if you dont like it.How many people have moved away then came back do you know? Maybe to NE. but not to Lincoln .Im moving to Guage county ,close enough to still associate with friends but far enough away.Dont complain about the university,stupid city council moves,taxes and whatever else Lincoln has to offer,JUST MOVE "

Al wrote on August 10, 2008 8:09 am:
" What a waste. The city could have spent this money enhancing mass transit powered by renewable fuels. Instead, this is just another example of the power hungry elites taking things away from the working class. For a town that likes to think of progressive, this whole project seems more like another Ceney Bush boondoggle than anything else "

Overtaxed wrote on August 10, 2008 9:19 am:
" What a boondoggle, taking this long to complete, and the project manager retiring before it's even done. why is the NRD even involved in this. The NRD keeps raising its levy, it should be abolished. "

Scott wrote on August 10, 2008 11:41 am:
" Typical. Businesses ALWAYS whine when they have a temporary disruption. But once it's done, they'll reap the benefits of a civic project without so much as a thank you. "

amazing wrote on August 10, 2008 12:38 pm:
" it always amazes me that people complain when their city/government tries to do something to benefit the community (flood management and revitalization) and then when there is a flood (New Orleans) everyone complains that no one took care of the problem when they knew about it. I guess working for the gov't is a thankless job because no matter what you do, no matter how good the reasons, the money to be saved or the lives to be bettered, there are people who think the sole purpose of you existence is to throw away money. "

Ben Reed wrote on August 10, 2008 3:40 pm:
" The next time the city wants to spend $250 million dollars I hope they do it to help our fledgeling economy. Lincoln's economy is in shambles. With the revenue of a boosted economy it would be easier to spend money like that on city works projects. "

Dan wrote on August 10, 2008 5:04 pm:
" Al, you sound like a bitter liberal. Mass transit powered by renewable fuels? First of all, why invest into mass transit when it is hardly used? More people will benifit from this project than mass transit. Second of all, Lincoln bus lines are already running on 100% bio-diesel. Another thing, "power hungry elites"? Give me a break! If they are that bad then why do they keep getting re-elected year after year? Probably because the so called "Working class" that they are trying to take things away from are not voting. I would take a bet that you probably didn't even vote, most people that complain about politics don't. Or, maybe they aren't taking things away from the working class and you are just a bitter liberal! Do yourself and the rest of us a favor and join "Why complain" and move! "

Al responding to Dan wrote on August 10, 2008 5:42 pm:
" People would use mass transit if the government had the courage to ban personal onwership of fossil fuel powered vehicles. This needs to happen if we are to stop global warming. I vote every election for the Green Party candidate when they are on the ballot, thank you very much. Their ideas are about the only chance this country has. "

Dustin wrote on August 10, 2008 6:52 pm:
" This had to be done sooner or later. It's better now than later so that the city can grow it's core rather than continue to spread and spend on it's outskirts. This is much more than flood and traffic control. It is a complete revitalization of run down bulidings and homes in the area north and east of downtown. In 10-15 years Lincoln will mark this project as one of the major projects that turned the city around to raise it's interior tax base rather than to continue to spend millions of dollars on four lane roads that only support low density housing. As a society we finally realized that a healthy city core is the key to overall economic developement. Get a clue people and embrace city's around the nation that are doing projects just like this at a much larger scale(KC over $4 billion, Omaha over $1.5 billion, Chicago $$$$, Minniapolis over $3 billion, etc etc etc!)

Dustin
UNL Community and Regional Planning Grad Student "

bluehair crybaby wrote on August 11, 2008 12:15 am:
" Waaaa, I don't' want anything new in Lincoln, I want everything to be like it was in 1954... no progress! "

jo wrote on August 11, 2008 8:50 am:
" i like it . it's great "

Convenienced wrote on August 11, 2008 10:27 am:
" I like it. It makes it a lot easier to get from my house on Holdrege to the Haymarket. Moreover, the new bike trails are great and it's certainly much more aesthetically pleasing in the 19th and Y to Vine areas now than just a few years ago. And taking land out of the flood-plain, such that it can be developed into higher density housing and so forth isn't a bad call, either. Major government projects always ruffle some feathers in the interim, but if completed properly, benefit the community in the long-run. The fact that Bostonians are starting the sing the praises of the Big Dig is clear evidence of this. Business will go on on W. O, new houses and businesses will come to core, traffic (cars and bikes) will flow more smoothly and everyone will be happy (and probably won't even consider what a good investment this was). "

ALB wrote on August 11, 2008 12:33 pm:
" Al, you have GOT to be joking!!! The government can take my fossil fuel powered SUV when they pry the steering wheel from my cold dead hands! Thanks for the laugh on the blog today! "