Meeting on intersection is Thursday at 6 p.m.
Published 6:35 pm Tuesday, February 14, 2017
A public informational meeting regarding a commissioned engineering study weighing options as to whether or not a roundabout or street alignment is appropriate for the intersection of High Street, Griffin Boulevard and Oak Street is set for Thursday at 6 p.m.
The meeting will be held in the council chambers of the Farmville Town Council, located on the third floor of the town hall at 116 N. Main St, according to a public notice from the town.
“There will be a short presentation outlining the scope of the study and a time for questions from the public,” officials said in the notice.
The unanimous decision to contract with Glen Allen-based engineering firm McCormick Taylor comes with a price tag of $44,000 — one that’s being split with Longwood University.
The council agreed to the study during its Jan. 11 council meeting.
According to the agreed-to scope of work, the public will be heavily involved in the study, according to a letter from the firm to Town Manager Gerald Spates, including a community meeting to “present the results, collect and respond to comments obtained at the meeting and document all public input in a technical memorandum.”
According to town documents, “town staff interviewed consultants for a proposed engineering study on the … intersection on a roundabout versus street alignment.”
A timeline from the firm has a results presentation slated for the town council’s July meeting. The second public meeting could be held in May, according to the document.
The roundabout at the intersection — one that’s busy for both pedestrians and vehicles — is part of Longwood’s Master Plan, one that lays out its vision through 2039. The plan was released and approved last winter by college officials.
“One of the key things I think is important in that scope is that we have (an) initial public meeting to hear from the public and all the parties involved,” Spates said.
“We’re looking forward to working with you and we appreciate the opportunity,” said Longwood President W. Taylor Reveley IV’s Chief of Staff Justin Pope during the meeting.
“It’s very gracious of Longwood to agree to pay for half of the study … It’s a town of Farmville issue…,” Mayor David Whitus said. “We very much appreciate that.”
During a Jan. 4 work session, some council members expressed concern about the presence of a roundabout, specifically citing pedestrian traffic.
The study, according to McCormick Taylor, will involve traffic, bicycle and pedestrian counts; meeting with town staff; preparing designs, concepts and estimates; and analyzing and comparing “a traditional realigned signalized intersection at this location with a roundabout.”
The firm will also help the town seek grants for a project, if agreed to, by the end of September.