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Nj Department Of Transportation

Wednesday, September 19, 2012

I-287 Project Begins From Morristown to Parsippany

Construction overlaps with the ongoing ramp work still upsetting residents of the Littleton Road corridor.

Construction has begun for a major roadway rehabilitation project over a seven-mile section of Interstate 287 in Morris County. According to a NJDOT statement, the $27.4 million project is being financed by the federal government. The plan is to improve I-287 from just south of Morristown's South Street underpass to the Littleton Road overpass in Parsippany—which, according to department spokesperson Tim Greeley, means an overlap with work that began last month on Littleton Road and Interstate 80. The project also includes repairing and resurfacing seven individual bridge decks on I-287, replacing bridge decks over the Whippany River in Hanover, upgrading guide rails and installing high-tech message signs and traffic cameras along the …

Littleton Road Project Still Has Residents Concerned

If you have something on your mind, send a Letter to the Editor to natalie.davis@patch.com

The New Jersey Department of Transportation's Interstate 80 project is still disturbing to the residents who live within the scope of the project. The proposed entrance ramp from Littleton Road/Route 202 North still raises questions in our minds. The right lane of Littleton Road will be used to gain access to the I-80 east ramp. The ramp from the Frontage Road also known as Littleton Road is proposed to be 100 feet from the I-80 East ramp at Littleton Road. Cars coming from the Marmora to Camden Road areas will use this ramp to access Littleton Road north and south, Cherry Hill Road and I-80. The Littleton Road corridor is a heavy traveled area. Commuters who work at Mack-Cali, Morris Corporate Center, Lanidex East and West, Waterview …

clyde donovan

11:59 am on Thursday, September 20, 2012

Link us to electronic copies of a map showing the roads/ramps as they exist now and a map showing the proposed changes. These maps should have been on the township website a long time ago.   more ›

Thursday, August 16, 2012

NJDOT Must Answer Questions Regarding I-80 Construction

Have something you want to say to the public? Send a Letter to the Editor to natalie.davis@patch.com.

The following questions need to be answered by the New Jersey Department of Transportation. I have shared these questions, along with concerns, to the mayor, deputy chief of police and Township Council. The Newark Star Ledger of Aug. 15, 2012, has an article quoting Rick Raczynski about the safety of a shoulder lane. He states, “Without having that safety net, that asphalt safety net called a shoulder, you really lose control of your car very quickly as soon as your tires hit the grass. The lack of shoulders also has led to secondary accidents. Emergency services vehicles also have a hard time reaching accidents on the narrow roadway.”  It seems the NJDOT chief engineers, the Union Paving & Construction Company, department spokesman Tim …

clyde donovan

3:45 pm on Friday, August 17, 2012

When the Lake Parsippany Historic District is created by local residents and the state DEP, there will be be a lot less rebuilding or modification of all roads in the Lake Parsippany area.   more ›

Wednesday, August 15, 2012

Town Officials, NJDOT to Discuss I-80 Rehab Controversy

At council meeting, Littleton Road area residents supplied town leaders with questions and research to present to DOT.

Mayor James Barberio and representatives of township departments are slated to meet behind closed doors with New Jersey Department of Transportation officials Wednesday to clear the air over the already underway Interstate 80 rehabilitation project. The announcement was made at the Tuesday Township Council meeting at Town Hall. A group of Lake Parsippany residents were on hand to deliver questions and requests for NJDOT to the mayor, who said he would present them on Wednesday. Barberio praised citizen activist Mary Purzycki for her efforts to stand up for her neighbors and the safety of the Littleton Road corridor. "I will definitely take your questions to the meeting," he told her. "Mary, you're all right!" Purzycki launched a citizen …

clyde donovan

8:32 pm on Wednesday, August 15, 2012

Lake Parsippany needs to be turned into state and national historic districts to protect the area from progress.   more ›

Monday, August 13, 2012

I-80 Rehab Project Underway, Residents Still Have Concerns

Littleton Road corridor residents have a list of requests to minimize what they'll have to endure as the 2-plus year construction project goes on.

The New Jersey Department of Transportation is moving full steam ahead on its $73 million rehabilitation of Interstate 80 in Parsippany despite concerns of residents in the Littleton Road corridor. Work on the project was slated to begin over the past weekend, according to department spokesperson Timothy Greeley.  The project, officials say, will address approximately four linear miles of eastbound and westbound travel lanes on I-80 and will mean a reconfiguration of the I-80 eastbound exit ramp to both directions of I-287 and the Route 202/Littleton Road northbound ramp to eastbound I-80. Greeley said the goal is to provide safer and more efficient traffic flow throughout the corridor. Residents in the Littleton Road/Lake Parsippany area …

Arthur Malkin

10:36 am on Thursday, August 30, 2012

Please post the project map on Patch.   more ›

Wednesday, August 8, 2012

I-80 Rehab Project Angers Littleton Road Area Residents

Citing safety concerns, citizen activists are calling on residents to raise their voices to have the NJDOT construction staging site closed.

Residents near Parsippany's Route 202 are expressing anger over the New Jersey Department of Transportation's $73 million major Interstate 80 roadway rehabilitation project. Specifically, the citizens are upset that DOT officials hired Union Paving Construction Co. of Mountainside to clear trees from an area at the juncture of Littleton and Marcella roads for the purpose of creating a staging site for the rehab effort. "The area is a heavy traveled corridor now," said an outraged Mary Purzycki, who lives nearby. "It will be impossible for area residents or any driver to travel this corridor safely once the staging area is operational." Purzycki said her initial concern was about sound levels, as the trees cleared served as a buffer to …

Hank Heller

10:31 am on Friday, August 10, 2012

Littleton Rd. is just the most wrong place to put a staging area. It is slow moving and time consuming to use Littleton now, can you imagine what it will be like to travel on Littleton when you are constantly sharing the road with heavy equipment moving back and forth from the work site. Aditionally, the residents in that area do not need more broken streets and torn up neighborhoods just to …   more ›

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