Title just about says it all... 24 lanes! I live in the Dallas-Fort Worth area, so I had to witness this first hand. I vary rarely ever find myself in this area; however, 2 years ago I had to travel though the construction to get to my brother's bachelor party. My GPS had to recalculate every mile, because I was driving on roads that didn't exist in the GPS or driving on detour roads so far off the navigation path, that the GPS thought I was going a different way. The entire area is a mess of biblical proportions.
Dallas Morning News
After all that work and $1.1 BILLION, they only expect this 24-lane monster highway to get traffic under control for only a few years!?!?!
Link to the Google Maps view of the area: https://maps.google.com/maps?q=Texa...xas+121,+Grapevine,+Tarrant,+Texas+76051&z=16
Google Street View
Photos I took on the Texan Trail overpass on Saturday (08/31/13):
Not far from here, TxDOT is also doing a massive overhaul of Interstate 365 and 35E Freeway in the Addison/ Farmers Branch area, which you must past though on your way to "The Connector." Its just as bad...
635 (LBJ) and 35E (Stemmons Freeway)
More of my photos:
Plus, they are constantly working on and increasing the size of PGBT (President George W Bush Tollway).
PGBT intersecting with 635 near Valley Ranch in Irving.
Is this just a DFW area past time, or do other cities experience never ending road construction like this? I really is mind blowing how much time and money we spend on these roads in Texas. If we aren't celebrating Cowboys football, then we are outside building roads. So strange... so many orange traffic barrels...
Dallas Morning News
GRAPEVINE A $1.1 billion project to untangle highway traffic north of Dallas/Fort Worth International Airport is slated to wrap up by early October a full nine months ahead of schedule.
The DFW Connector, an overhaul of State Highways 114 and 121, will double capacity on a stretch that already sees 180,000 drivers each day. The corridor will be 24 lanes across at its widest spot, including main lanes, frontage roads and tolled managed lanes.
.....
The DFW Connector will be the Texas Department of Transportations first highway in North Texas built as a public-private partnership, a factor that helped speed construction timelines and save money. And the project benefited from an unprecedented $260 million infusion of federal stimulus dollars.
But for those who live, work and drive around the project, the finish line is a welcome sight for more basic reasons: the end of frustrating detours and closures and the promise of free-flowing travel in what was once known as the Grapevine Funnel.
.....
Dry weather over the last few years is largely responsible for the early finish. But TxDOT officials had already estimated that the project would take almost four years less and cost $400 million less than a traditional project.
The reason: The DFW Connector was a public-private partnership that used a design-build method. That setup gave the contractor, NorthGate Constructors, more flexibility over its work and more opportunities to try some innovative techniques.
NorthGate, for instance, gathered the concrete from the old lanes, crushed it up and used it for the highways base layer. It took all the old steel rebar and recycled it for use in reinforcing the new concrete. The contractor also had a concrete batch plant on site to save trips.
From the beginning to end, this project has led in innovation, said Phil Wilson, TxDOTs executive director.
Even with those efficiency measures, the DFW Connector in its current form almost didnt happen. Facing a funding shortfall in 2009, TxDOT officials started preparing for a scaled-down $667 million version of the project.
Rather than overhauling large swaths of both State Highways 114 and 121, the project wouldve focused just on the lanes west of D/FWs north entrance.
But then the federal government swooped in with $260 million from the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act, also known as the stimulus. Officials said the award was the largest single stimulus award for any transportation project in the country.
And TxDOT has since found some additional cash to improve Grapevine Mills Parkway, which links to the main project, as a separate effort in the coming months.
.....
But there will also be improved access to and from D/FW. Traffic will now be better segregated between 121, 114 and nearby Interstate 635. And new flyover bridges between 114 and 121 have replaced connections that required motorists to drive on surface streets in some instances.
It wont be until early next year, though, that drivers can take a trip through the projects tolled managed lanes, known as TEXpress Lanes. TxDOT must still install the tolling equipment on a four-mile stretch of SH 114 and test it.
TEXpress lanes allow anyone, including single-occupant vehicles, to pay a fee to ride the fast lanes; vehicles with two or more occupants will receive a discount.
DFW Connectors TEXpress Lanes will be two lanes in each direction. Officials havent yet determined the exact toll rates on those lanes. But prices are expected to be on the lower end, around 16 cents per mile.
Given all the extra free capacity being added, they dont expect a tremendous amount of traffic at first on the managed lanes. But officials know the region will only continue to grow, bringing more cars and trucks in the process.
We used to refer to this as the funnel, said Tarrant County Judge Glen Whitley. Now we call it the connector because hopefully weve removed that funnel part of it for at least a number of years into the future.
After all that work and $1.1 BILLION, they only expect this 24-lane monster highway to get traffic under control for only a few years!?!?!
Link to the Google Maps view of the area: https://maps.google.com/maps?q=Texa...xas+121,+Grapevine,+Tarrant,+Texas+76051&z=16
Google Street View
Photos I took on the Texan Trail overpass on Saturday (08/31/13):



Not far from here, TxDOT is also doing a massive overhaul of Interstate 365 and 35E Freeway in the Addison/ Farmers Branch area, which you must past though on your way to "The Connector." Its just as bad...
635 (LBJ) and 35E (Stemmons Freeway)
More of my photos:



Plus, they are constantly working on and increasing the size of PGBT (President George W Bush Tollway).
PGBT intersecting with 635 near Valley Ranch in Irving.

Is this just a DFW area past time, or do other cities experience never ending road construction like this? I really is mind blowing how much time and money we spend on these roads in Texas. If we aren't celebrating Cowboys football, then we are outside building roads. So strange... so many orange traffic barrels...