2011年3月22日 星期二

Southfield Freeway chokes down to a single lane in Detroit

Southfield Freeway chokes down to a single lane in Detroit, Dearborn


The Southfield Freeway is about to become a much less traveled highway next week as lane restrictions kick in.


The Michigan Department of Transportation said today that the freeway will go down to one lane each way between I-96 and Ford Road in Detroit and Dearborn, losing two lanes in both directions for lighting upgrades and other work through October.


It’s the first slam to commuters in this year’s biggest project in metro Detroit. The $80-million upgrade of the Southfield also will shut the freeway from May to October between I-96 and the Lodge Freeway as the state rebuilds more than three miles of road and upgrades 24 bridges in Wayne and Oakland counties.


MDOT spokesman Rob Morosi said drivers should seek alternate routes and plan extra time for delays.The accidental experiment came just weeks before the county r4i council is set to publish a new report on the future of the square.


“The detour we’re using for M-39 is Telegraph Road,” Morosi said. “It has multiple lanes,The letter, which contains redactions by the University, expressed confidence Led strip light in individuals. and we’re tweaking the signals to get as much traffic through as we can. Without a doubt,Richmond says this is a way for people purchasing pet food to subsidize the SPCA, which does led bulb "a wonderful job" and is known to be underfunded. there will be congestion. People should allot for that extra time.”


The M-39 work between I-96 and Ford – roughly six miles of the freeway – will include replacing about 100 light posts, which will get new LED lights. MDOT said there isn’t enough space on the freeway for crews to do the work and keep more than one lane open each way."I trust that with University support, you and (redacted) have compact fluorescent the integrity and skills to be change agents," the letter said. "However, it is completely within the authority of the IFC itself to decide if it has the right leadership in place to lead this organization going forward."A team of scientists led by John Badding, a professor of chemistry at Penn led lights State, has developed the very first optical fiber made with a core of zinc selenide -- a light-yellow compound that can be used as a semiconductor.

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