Garden Parkway

Garden Parkway
Gaston East-West Connector
Route information
Maintained by NCDOT
Major junctions
West end: I-85 in Gastonia
East end: I-485 near Charlotte
Location
Counties: Gaston, Mecklenburg
Highway system

North Carolina Highway System

The Garden Parkway is a proposed limited access toll road to be built in North Carolina, United States, that will pass through portions of Gaston County and Mecklenburg County.

Contents

Route description

Planned routes for the Garden Parkway would total between 21.5 to 23.7 miles (38.1 km) in length. The route begins between Gastonia and Bessemer City; going south, connecting US 29/US 74 and US 321. The route then goes east, connecting NC 274, NC 279, and NC 273. Crossing over the Catawba River, the route ends at Interstate 485/West Boulevard interchange in Mecklenburg County, immediately southwest of Charlotte/Douglas International Airport.[1]

A connector road was also proposed between I-85 and US 321 just north of Gastonia. However, this does not appear anymore in current NCDOT maps.[1]

History

Cost and Construction Estimates

Preliminary costs are estimated (as of August, 2006) to be between $732 million and $1.568 billion, with final costs to be determined during design. The North Carolina Turnpike Authority has projected initial construction as beginning in the spring of 2010, with completion to US 321 expected by the spring of 2015. 2030 is the projected date for completion to I-85.

Project Purpose

The purpose of the project was originally conceived by the Gaston Urban Area Metropolitan Planning Organization (Gaston MPO)[2] to provide an east-west connection between I-85 west of Gastonia to I-485 in Mecklenburg County.[3] Funding is available to build the toll road to US 321, south of Gastonia beginning in 2010. Completion date is scheduled in 2030. Projections show 19,000 to 21,000 vehicles at the project's US 321 terminus in 2030.

Community Opposition

Community opposition is forming against what some affected property owners have called "the toll road to nowhere." [4] They assert that the toll road will discharge 20,000 vehicles through the York-Chester neighborhood, which is on the National Register of Historic Places, and that the project will not meet the purpose of providing the east-west connection that was originally conceived.

Community Support

Community support has formed as a counter to a toll road opposition group who refers to the project as "the toll road to nowhere." The "Build The Garden Parkway" group claims that the Garden Parkway "...is the result of many years of hard work and planning by people who care about their community. It is a commitment to Gaston County's growth and development. It is our chance to make a lasting, positive impact on the future for us all, and it will not come again." [5] During the summer of 2009, at public meetings in the towns of Belmont, NC and Gastonia, NC, pro-parkway residents arrived to show their support with green signs and t-shirts featuring the slogan, "Build The Garden Parkway! Gaston County's Road To the Future". The Gaston Regional Chamber of Commerce has also been vocal in their support of the Garden parkway project. Chamber president Elyse Cochran is on the record in stating, "we feel it is for the greater good of Gaston County as a whole, what this proposed project does is open up opportunities for this community to attract positive growth and development long term, adding to the tax coffers of our community."[4]

Exit list

County Location Mile Exit Destinations Notes
Gaston Gastonia I-85 Proposed (Currently in development)[1]
US 29 / US 74
Linwood Road
US 321
Robinson Road
NC 274
NC 279
NC 273
Mecklenburg Dixie River Road
I-485 / West Boulevard
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi
     Concurrency terminus     Closed/Former     Incomplete access     Unopened

References

External links