Keysville roundabout project moves ahead, as construction starts

KEYSVILLE – If you have traveled Route 15 to and from Keysville you may have noticed construction work has started. Six years after talk first began of a Keysville roundabout, drivers are starting to see dirt moved and possible deadlines.

“The project includes grading, drainage structures, water line utility work, paving, pavement marking, and signing,” Virginia Department of Transportation (VDOT) Communications Manager Len Stevens said. “During construction, maintenance of traffic will be phased to facilitate building the majority of the roundabout with minimal traffic impacts.” 

The project is expected to be completed by June 2024.

VDOT said due to safety concerns and accident history, the project will improve the intersection with a roundabout concept.

In 2017 the proposed $5.2 million roundabout at the intersection of Routes 15 and U.S. 360 made it through the second round of scoring under the new SMART SCALE prioritization process used by the state’s Commonwealth Transportation Board (CTB).

According to Stevens, construction funding for the project includes both state and federal sources.

Keysville roundabout about safety

Following a VDOT virtual public hearing in November 2020 to hear comments and concerns, a safety issue was brought into question that led VDOT engineers to redesign a portion of the roundabout.

In a 2021 interview, former VDOT Communications Manager Paula Jones said the primary issue was addressing a safety concern by eliminating a high-speed conflict point by removing the Route 15 southbound ramp onto 360 westbound. “That traffic would access 360 westbound by the Route 15 northbound ramp,” Jones said.

The new design directs traffic traveling on Route 15 South into the roundabout, then take the first exit to head west on Route 360.

According to transportation documents, the current intersection has a major road (two-way, not divided) as well as an off-ramp and an entrance leading to an off-ramp, “all connecting at a three-approach stop-sign intersection that is in a grade curve,” county leaders said in the application to state transportation officials. “Sight distance, as well as traffic flow, currently contributes to driver error. This project will replace the stop-sign intersection with a roundabout to allow for a more fluid entrance and exit to the off-ramps and take the sight-distance issue out of the equation. The Charlotte County Industrial Park is along the route of this project, and the Heartland Business Park is adjacent to the project area.”

 

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