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DOT plans changes for Cianbro entrance
Thursday, April 10, 2008
The final designs are not set in stone, or pavement in this case, but
Department of Transportation officials are going to change the entrance
at Cianbro’s Eastern Manufacturing Facility to accommodate large trucks.
"We’re installing a new traffic signal at the entrance of the new
mill," City Engineer Frank Higgins told city councilors on Tuesday.
"We’re not going to widen South Main Street, but we are going to
restripe it."
The entrance will have "a fairly short dedicated turn lane" on the
right into the Cianbro site, and a "straight shot" traffic lane for
those going south toward Orrington, he said.
Three parking spots in front of Pepino’s Taco Stand, at 513 South
Main St., will remain and the sidewalk in front of the restaurant and
Cianbro will be reduced to make room for the changes.
"In order to provide those three spaces, we’re acquiring properties
from Old Mill Redevelopment," Higgins said.
Old Mill Redevelopment LLC and South Brewer Redevelopment LLC are
limited liability companies the city formed to take ownership of the
defunct Eastern Fine Paper Co. mill site to protect Brewer from
liability.
Cianbro is in the process of changing the mill property into a
building module manufacturing facility that will employ more than 500
skilled workers.
"The city has bent over backward to provide parking for [Taco Stand
owner] Mr. [Norris] Bryant," Higgins said. "I think we’ve struck a good
balance."
Across the street at Ron’s Intown Cafe, parking will be eliminated in
the front of the restaurant.
"There is just no way" to accommodate any parking there, Higgins
said.
Both Ron’s and the Taco Stand have off-street parking beside their
buildings.
The funds for the construction project are part of two Brewer
earmarks, totaling $3.55 million, tied to the 2005 federal
transportation bill that were sponsored by Maine’s congressional
leadership.
U.S. Sens. Olympia Snowe and Susan Collins spearheaded one earmark,
totaling $1.75 million, on the Senate side for improving the entrance
into the old mill site, and U.S. Rep. Michael Michaud sponsored the
other $1.8 million earmark in the House.
The House earmark is open-ended and doesn’t list specific projects,
but must be used for transportation improvements associated with the
city’s waterfront. An earmark is a special request outside the normal
funding process.
Requests for bids to do the roadwork are expected to be issued in May
with construction beginning in June. Traffic detours are not expected,
and the project has a September completion date.
A copyright story
from the Bangor Daily News, April 10, 2008.
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