Dundas Street dig goes to 6 days a week, 24 hours a day - Action News
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Dundas Street dig goes to 6 days a week, 24 hours a day

In a bid to get Phase I complete before winter arrives, crews working to rebuild a downtown section of Dundas Street will pick up the pace.

New schedule is a move to wrap up Phase I before the construction season ends

Construction to transform Dundas Street into Dundas Place is set to wrap up in 2019. (Colin Butler/CBC News)

In a bid to get Phase I complete before winter arrives, crews working to rebuild a downtown section of DundasStreet are starting to pick up the pace.

The city says the massive street reconstruction work to transform DundasStreet into a flex street known as DundasPlace will be stepped up to six days a week, 24 hours a day.The $26-million project to replace aging utilities and transform Dundasbetween Ridoutand Wellington streets started in the spring.

Jim Yanchula is the city's manager of downtown projects. He says the new work schedule is an effort to get Phase I the section between Richmond and Ridoutstreets complete before winter's arrival ends the construction season for the year.

Yanchulasays the project remains on schedule, pointing out the city's timeline has always called for Phase I to be complete by the fall or winter of 2018.

But he admits there have been delays. Some caused by wet weather, others due to surprisescrews found after the pavement was peeled back. But it's also been a very complicated project with crews working to locateand replace water and sewer that in some cases, was many decades old.

"There were coal chute vaults, there were basement encroachments, there were locations of utilities that weren't mapped properly to name a few," said Yanchula.

Some merchants have complained the construction has left a deep dent in their bottom line. There have also been delays for drivers, and sidewalk closures and detours for pedestrians.

Yanchulasays the work was neededand that the end result will be worth it.

"We know that there's disruption and it will be great when it's finished because this only happens once every 150 years," he said.

Shoppers on Dundas Street have to contend with construction fencing now, but by 2020 the street will be transformed into a flex street that can be easily pedestiranized for concerts and other events. (Andrew Lupton/CBC)

Starting Wednesday and for the remainder of the construction season, the intersection of Dundas Street and Richmond Street will be closed in all directions to allow for underground infrastructure work and surface restoration.

Also starting Wednesday, Talbot Street will reopen to northbound and southbound trafficfrom Kent Street to Fullarton Street.

Phase II of the two-year DundasPlace project the stretch from Richmond east to Wellington Street is slated to start next spring.