Road Construction Remains On Hold Through January 2
December 30, 2018
Lane closures associated with normal construction activities along Interstate 10 and major state roads remain suspended until 11:59 p.m. Tuesday, January 2 due to holiday travel. Photos for NorthEscambia.com, click to enlarge.
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8 Responses to “Road Construction Remains On Hold Through January 2”
Bob, the article refers to state roads, not county…
I live off of 29 in Molino – and the pot holes from timber trucks are HORRIBLE – so you have to stay in the left lane going south – and then the damned train at the nasty papermill and sitting there for long periods of time breathing in the stuff coming out of the chimney which has gotten bad again since the cancellation of the emissions concerns – now you can smell it again – so to be honest – I LOVE having NFCU being here and growing and the college growing and medical centers – I would much rather have that than chemical and paper mills! BUT highway 29 is a nightmare and I have had my front end aligned twice this year due to it!!!! PENSACOLA BE MORE PREPARED!!!
They’ve almost built a three mile long bridge, over water, in less time than widening the stupid overpass over 9 Mile Road…
I’m tired of all this being done for Navy Federal.. all the wooded areas being destroyed for housing.. go find it elsewhere.. I also am fighting along with my neighbors the expressway that is to be in our backyards… we bought land for cattle and now find out that it is in the way of their expressway.. build it elsewhere..
Escambia county government could not find their way out of a wet paper bag!!!
Are there any plans to replace highway 29? The south bound lanes from at least the hwy 97 intersection at least, is really bad. Noticed yesterday that there were several large potholes in addition to the top layer or two of asphalt being worn away
Normal construction?!?!?
You mean NO CONSTRUCTION is the normal construction!
The entire widening project should have been done 4 years ago as soon as the BOCC knew about Navy Federal expansion and thousands of employees moving here from Virginia.