Interchanges Along Route 50 Now Complete

The completed Route 50/N. Courthouse Road/10th Street N. interchange The completed Route 50/N. Courthouse Road/10th Street N. interchange Local officials hold a ribbon-cutting for the new Route 50/N. Courthouse Road interchange Arlington County Board Chair Jay Fisette speaks at a ribbon-cutting for the new Route 50/N. Courthouse Road interchange Del. Patrick Hope speaks at a ribbon-cutting for the new Route 50/N. Courthouse Road interchange The completed Route 50/N. Courthouse Road/10th Street N. interchange The completed Route 50/N. Courthouse Road/10th Street N. interchange Arlington Director of Transportation Dennis Leach speaks at a ribbon-cutting for the new Route 50/N. Courthouse Road interchange Local officials hold a ribbon-cutting for the new Route 50/N. Courthouse Road interchange

All of the ramps, lanes and bridges for the interchanges of Route 50, N. Courthouse Road and 10th Street N. are open and finished.

Arlington County Board Chair Jay Fisette, Del. Patrick Hope and local and state transportation officials were on hand to cut the ribbon on the $39 million project that has been more than a decade in the making.

“My first County Board meeting in January 1998, in the first Board packet, the design of this interchange was in that packet,” Fisette said. “Really good things take time and partnerships. Hopefully we will continue to get these types of outcomes.”

The new interchange includes two new bridges at Courthouse Road and 10th Street, each with LED-lit metal grillwork displays, although the LED lights aren’t ready to be turned on yet. It includes a left-exit from eastbound Route 50 onto N. Courthouse Road, and turning lanes from westbound Route 50 that are separated from the three lanes of fast-moving traffic.

“Everyone who drives on Arlington Blvd every single day is going to have a much better experience,” Hope said.

In addition to the new traffic patterns and LED lights, the sides of the new highway have custom-designed concrete panels. The grillwork and panels were both designed by artist Vicki Scuri. The LED lights and landscaping along the highway are the only two components of the project that are not yet finished.

The project also included new bicycle and pedestrian paths along either side of the highway, with striping for two-way travel, between N. Pershing Drive and Courthouse Road on the westbound side, and Pershing and N. Rolfe Street on the eastbound side.

“This project represents the values we hold in Arlington. it’s about safety, it’s about travel choices,” Arlington Director of Transportation Dennis Leach said. “What an incredible difference this is if you are walking or biking.”

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