From Deseret News archives:

Belt loop studied for airport access

Published: Thursday, June 14, 2007 12:04 a.m. MDT
 |  E-MAIL | PRINT | FONT + - 
PROVO — Provo is seriously considering separate proposals that together would effectively act as a belt-loop highway to bring traffic to the city's growing airport.

Residents are invited to provide public comment at a meeting tonight on the first proposal, dubbed the Provo west-side connector. The connector would create a new three-mile road that would cut east to west through southwestern Provo from the airport to the University Avenue I-15 interchange.

The meeting is a first step in an environmental impact study being conducted by Provo with help from UDOT and the Federal Highway Administration. The meeting is scheduled from 5 to 7 p.m. at Amelia Earhart Elementary, 2585 W. 200 South.

"That property on the west side is sacred property to a lot of families who have owned it for decades," Mayor Lewis Billings said. "We encourage people to come in and tell us about issues."

The second proposal is Provo's idea for an alternative to UDOT's study on the future of Geneva Road. Plans to widen the road have come and gone over the past decade, but UDOT is considering widening Geneva Road to as many as five lanes north of Provo.

Story continues below
Provo Mayor Lewis Billings told the City Council this week that he'd like to see UDOT and the city split off the new traffic that would come to Provo on that road to a new road that would go in near Utah Lake, west of all the existing development north of Center Street, and connect to 3110 West to provide flow north and south to the airport.

Together, the two roads, though not a freeway, would be similar to the I-215 belt loop in the Salt Lake Valley that takes traffic off I-15 and provides ready access to the west side and Salt Lake City International Airport.

"With all the population growth on the west side, we need more access," Provo Community Development Director Gary McGinn said. "This would be a sort of belt loop to the airport and would connect traffic from the south without putting too much on Geneva Road and Lakeshore Drive."

Billings has long touted the Provo Municipal Airport as a future home to regional commercial airline carriers. The airport's new air traffic control tower is proof of the growing air traffic in and out of Provo. Brigham Young University's football team regularly flies large charter jets out of the airport, which also serves as a backup for jets diverted from Salt Lake International.

Comments

You can be the first to comment on this story.

Image
Deseret Morning News graphic

previousnext

Latest comments

Couple of things to consider - 1) National debt is about tripled since BO...

Thanks for the sermons, y'all.

If you look at BYU losses, they share one aspect, that is that the teams that...

can't be more wrong. Utah 31 BYU 17

I've been in that cave and I've been in the Birth Canal section of the cave....

Tiger Woods was unconscious

Hello Tiger Woods, I am relieved to know that you are doing well and on to a...

I am laughing so hard right now from looking at the picture of the BYU Fan...

Affluence abounds in Utah

if you figure an annual health care cost of $14,244 per family (towers perrin...

Letters: Free our captive children

Dude, seriously, how do you do it? I can't get the DN to publish MOST of my...

Utes to get tested by Illinois

I have know Marshall Henderson (G) since he was in elementary school. He and...

Advertisements