Busy Charlottetown intersection to close for 2 weeks - Action News
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PEI

Busy Charlottetown intersection to close for 2 weeks

The main intersection at the northwest entrance to Charlottetown will be closed for most of the last half of September, the city announced Wednesday.

Closure of intersection at entrance into city will start Sept. 17 to allow replacement of large storm channel

The intersection of Capital Drive, North River Road and Lower Malpeque Road needs a new storm drainage system. (Laura Meader/CBC)

The main intersection at the northwest entrance to Charlottetown will be closed for most of the last half of September, the city announced Wednesday.

The intersection of the Trans-Canada, North River Road and Lower Malpeque Roadneeds a new storm drainage system. The city did some stopgap work at the intersection earlier this summer.

Potential for road collapse

In a news release, the city said the current pipe, which is about 75 years old, could fail or soil could erode around the roadway if the storm channel is not replaced. Either of those situations could lead to a collapse of the road surface.

"Theproject has to be done, or you riskthe culverts collapsing, and then you're into quite a bit longer timeline to try and repair," saidCoun. Terry Bernard, chair of the public works department.

"So, we're trying to be proactive."

The Queens Arms intersection needs a new storm drainage system. The culverts need to be replaced. (Laura Meader/CBC)

The city appreciates that the project will be a major disruption as well asfrustrating for area businesses and the travelling public, but Bernard saidit's necessary.

Businesses are worried

Businesses around the intersection worry they're going to lose money when the area is closed for construction.

Traffic will be allowedintobusinesses, but everyone else must take detours.

Melvin Roberts, a paint specialist at Benjamin Moore House of Excellence, is concerned about how the closure will affect business. (Laura Meader/CBC)

"I would say it would probably affect our salesI'm going to guess somewhere around 35 per cent because it's not going to be very manageable for the people in the early part of the morning, which you get a lot of the contractors," said MelvinRoberts, a paint specialist at Benjamin Moore House of Excellence.

"If you saw lineups when they were doing the work through Cornwall, it'll be nothing compared to that, because you'll have four branches of it."

Closure will last two weeks

The $1.7 million project will shut down the intersection starting Sept. 17. It will last about two weeks.

Closing the intersection will allow the work to be completed more quickly, Bernard said.

'The project has to be done,' said Terry Bernard, chair of public works for the City of Charlottetown. (Laura Meader/CBC)

"It's a major intersection. Will it be an inconvenience? Yes. We're looking to reduce that timeline as soon as possible," explained Bernard.

Some businesses wondered whywork couldn't be done at night, but the city saysit's difficult to find people to cover 24-hour shifts. Additionally,culvert work requires daylight, and the noise would be too disruptive forhotels in the area.

The project will involve digging a 12-metre trench diagonally across the intersection to excavate the existing pipe and install the new storm channel.

The city has published maps of detours around the intersection.

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With files from Laura Meader