Big Shanty Rd. project opens with a back to the future theme
by Geoff Folsom
July 19, 2012 01:16 AM | 7811 views | 15 15 comments | 14 14 recommendations | email to a friend | print
Cadillacs, Mustangs and Pontiac GTOs — all popular cars from the ’70s — drive under the interstate.<br>(MDJ Staff/Laura Moon)
Cadillacs, Mustangs and Pontiac GTOs — all popular cars from the ’70s — drive under the interstate.
(MDJ Staff/Laura Moon)
slideshow
From left, Cobb Chairman Tim Lee, Town Center Area CID Chairman Mason Zimmerman and  Executive Director Lanie Shipp handle the ribbon-cutting.<br>(MDJ Staff/Laura Moon)
From left, Cobb Chairman Tim Lee, Town Center Area CID Chairman Mason Zimmerman and Executive Director Lanie Shipp handle the ribbon-cutting.
(MDJ Staff/Laura Moon)
slideshow

KENNESAW — A parade of vintage cars from the 1970s marked the reopening of Big Shanty Road in the Town Center Community Improvement District on Wednesday.

The cars, as well as the pervasive ’70s rock and disco music, were designed to take the more than 100 attendees back to the last time the road was open.

Some attendees wore hippie clothing, while county leaders jumped in cars including a purple Cadillac and a baby-blue GTO to wrap up the half-hour ceremony for the opening of the final phases of the $27.4 million project. The section of Big Shanty Road, located south of Chastain Road and north of Barrett Parkway, had been closed since before 1970, when construction of Interstate 75 bisected the route.

Construction on the project, totaling $16.9 million, is being paid with $8.1 million in federal stimulus money through the Georgia Department of Transportation; $6.3 million from the Town Center Community Improvement District and $2.5 million from Cobb County.

The county is paying a total of $11.1 million, with $7.9 million going toward right-of-way acquisitions. Dan McDuff, deputy director of Cobb DOT, said the numbers are tentative because some clean-up and median improvements on the roadway still need to be completed.

In addition, the county is paying $760,999 in utility costs.

The CID also kicked in $1.9 million for engineering.

Cobb Commission Chairman Tim Lee praised the federal, state and local support of the two-mile Big Shanty Extension, particularly the CID.

“I want to be clear in one thing: This project would not happen but for the Town Center CID,” Lee said. “If the Town Center CID didn’t exist, the leadership did not decide to get together years ago and tax themselves additionally, we would not be here today. I want you to understand how important CIDs are to the movement of traffic, the movement of people, the movement of bikes and for economic development in our county. It is critical that they succeed, and I’m proud to be a partner with them.”

The project’s $1.75 million grant from the State Road and Tollway Authority to the Town Center CID, which the CID will pay back, raised the ire of Larry Savage, one of Lee’s three opponents in the July 31 Republican Primary. Though Savage, the only one of Lee’s challengers in attendance at the ribbon-cutting, suspected the money came from toll collections on State Route 400, SRTA executive director Gena Evans insisted the money came from gas taxes.

But Savage, who has been strongly critical of the Cumberland and Town Center CIDs’ donations to the Metro Atlanta Voter Education Network for what he considers TSPLOST advocacy, was not pleased with that answer either.

“It’s taxpayer money,” he said. “In my mind, the CIDs are promoting the TSPLOST at the same time they are getting money from government for transportation. It’s the appearance of a conflict of interest. Whether it’s real or not, it’s the kind of thing that makes people lose faith in their government.”

CID executive director Lanie Shipp said the district had been looking at an east-west connection to alleviate traffic since it started in 1997. Two studies were conducted to determine its location.

“This proved to be the most logical place,” she said.

While the CID doesn’t typically fund construction, preferring to fund engineering costs, Shipp said Town Center, which is funded by property taxes levied on member businesses, had to do so with the Big Shanty project.

Kennesaw State University President Dr. Dan Papp said it can currently take 30 minutes to drive a half mile from his campus to I-75 during the afternoon rush hour. But the new route, which also includes a 10-foot-wide trail for bicycle and pedestrian use for students and others, will help take traffic off Chastain Road while providing better access to the school’s 88-acre sports and recreation complex, including its soccer stadium, which is located at the intersection of Big Shanty Road and George Busbee Parkway.

“With this connector, traffic in the area will be reduced tremendously,” he said.

McDuff said a Croy Engineering report completed for the project estimates that the Big Shanty connector will remove 19,100 vehicles per day from Barrett Parkway, between Cobb Parkway and I-75, and 13,000 vehicles per day from Chastain Road from Duncan Road to I-75 by 2025.

“Just like with the Windy-Mac Connector, we’re going to see an immediate impact,” McDuff said.

The completed project allows drivers to connect from Chastain Road, west of I-75, to Chastain Meadows Parkway, east of I-575. The first section to open, actually called Phase 3, widened the eastern part of Big Shanty Road from George Busbee Parkway to Chastain Meadows Parkway when it opened earlier this year.

Phases 1 and 2 opened to traffic Wednesday, McDuff said. Phase 2 creates new roadway from Town Point Drive to Barrett Lakes Boulevard, while widening the road to Chastain Road. This section of the roadway has a 35 mph speed limit, while the reminder is 45 mph.

Phase 1 of the Big Shanty Road extension, the connection from Barrett Lakes Boulevard under I-75 to George Busbee Parkway, also opened Wednesday.

C.W. Matthews Contracting Company Inc. of Marietta served as lead contractor on the project.

Construction on the project started in September 2009, with an original completion date of April 30, 2012. McDuff said complicated utility relocations and delays beyond the contractor’s control impacted the schedule. But the goal of finishing the project before the fall semester at KSU and Cobb County schools was realized.

Wednesday’s ribbon-cutting was held in a parking lot owned by Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta in an area near graffiti-covered walls left over from an abandoned go-kart track. Northeast Cobb Commissioner JoAnn Birrell, whose district is connected to northwest Cobb Commissioner Helen Goreham’s district by the new road, said the project will make it easier for drivers to connect from the east to the west while avoiding heavily trafficked I-75 interchanges at Chastain Road and Barrett Parkway.

“I would think that with the access here opened up, it would attract businesses to want to come here, especially near the KSU area and the athletic fields and the Town Center area as well,” she said.

Others in attendance included Goreham and southeast Cobb Commissioner Bob Ott, state Sen. Lindsey Tippens (R-west Cobb), and Reps. Don Parsons (R-northeast Cobb) and Judy Manning (R-Marietta).

While the Big Shanty extension doesn’t currently ­offer access to I-75, McDuff said it is planned as an exit for a new managed toll lane that will open alongside the interstate.

Read more: The Marietta Daily Journal - News, Sports, Classifieds, Businesses in Marietta, GA

Comments
(15)
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THANK YOU
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July 20, 2012
A big thank you to the Town Center CID for their work to bring together community partners in order to make the district they serve a better place for anyone who lives, works, plays or gets educated in it.
KellyWoods
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July 20, 2012
Road projects such as these are just a small part to getting our transportation infrastructure up to par. Small projects such as these allow us to begin to see the impact of a transportation project on a regional level.
NotBuyin'It
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July 21, 2012
Nice try, Kelly.

A region-wide consumption tax to fund small, local projects used by only a handful of drivers such as these is the wrong vehicle to use.

Actual planning, aided by acquiring some actual talent at CDOT (and other DOTs), with user-fee (gas tax) funding is the better, more equitable way to do these improvements.

However, liberals and bureaucrats love big government, big taxes, and cronyism, as long as what's being done "feels good", or expands their power.

VOTE NO on TSPLOST.
Just Sayin'
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July 19, 2012
TJ at KSU - So sorry you have to be inconvenienced by the taxpayers who suplement the budgets of everyone at KSU.

Just tried out the Big Shanty Road today and am a huge fan. Exits or not, it cut trvael time down by two thirds to get to Chastain Meadows Parkway. This will end up saving many people time and money without the exits. Finally, a project that is worthwhile!!!!!
StillStuck
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July 19, 2012
WTG, Just Sayin'! Do you have any idea how much revenue is generated by having a regional university in Cobb County? They are the sixth largest employer in Cobb County (behind Home Depot, Lockheed, Welstar, Cobb County Schools, Cobb County Govt) - over 3,400 employees. Most of those are really great jobs that people would love to have in this economy.

They also produce untold revenue in sales tax. According to a report released by the Board of Regents of the University System of Georgia, KSU’s FY 2011 economic impact on the 28-county Atlanta metropolitan region was nearly $854 million. That was an increase of seven percent during a year when most sectors would have killed for such growth.

Who is supplementing who here? Most local governments would bend over backwards to have this kind of economic engine in their community and would do everything they could to keep them happy.
lunch special
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July 19, 2012
I'll take the roasted bridge & 2 organic connectors.

Is anyone REALLY planning for what's about to hit America?

Someone better figure out how to grind up cement & asphalt, turn it into an edible product.

Every county in the country should be looking for patches of land, encourage the community to come together & start co-ops & food gardens.

Only the SMART will survive!!

This crap is absurd!!
one eye
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July 19, 2012
Just how many cars travel Barrett Parkway? Looks like the same math scholars MAVEN used for their TSPLOST "education" claim. Removing 19,100 car will make it easy for turtles to cross the road.

Why was Mr Savage the only candidate for Chairman in attendance? Are Boyce and Byrd really concerned with Cobb or do they already know enough. (Lee's attendance is part of his job)
Fuzzy CID Charters
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July 19, 2012
The issue is NOT CID's, we like CID's when they do their assigned chartered functions. It is when they cross over out of the functions chartered by the Board of Commissioners that there is objection. We just need to clarify the chartered functions of the CID's and get them back in their box. Throughout this process we must continue to enthusiastically endorse and support their legitimate efforts, while we clarify the grey areas.

Advocacy of the TSPLOST using tax funds is not a chartered function of the CID's.
COBB CSI
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July 19, 2012
The MDJ is reporting the facts, JR you now live under Mableton Form Based code just wait till that truck hits you! Mableton form based meets all the U.N. approvals’ in it maybe you can go the World Court when that truck hits you. When Roy and his buddies start moving dirt without zoning notices you’ll running to the terrible MDJ screaming for justice. The CID’s the Development authorizes cost us a lot of money with half baked ideas and TIA or TSPLOST is the biggest jobs program without traffic relief in it.
TJ at KSU
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July 19, 2012
This would have been the perfect time to have exits off of I-75 in both directions to feed into Big Shanty. The available land is there, as is an opening for Exit 270. (Currently, you go from Exit 269 Barrett Parkway to Exit 271 Chastain Road and there is no Exit 270). This would have taken way more cars off of both Barrett Pkwy. and Chastain Road! KSU students, faculty and staff are sick of having to wait through multiple lights at Frey Rd. at Chastain to get to the freeway! Where's the long-term vision???
Its Like This
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July 19, 2012
The FEDS have control of those interstate exits. It appears the solution was found that could be worked out with them. This is why a county has experts work on these issues, but thanks for the suggestion TJ>
JR in Mableton
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July 19, 2012
Interesting to see how the MDJ managed to work CID/TIA controversy into a Cobb County SPLOST project......what does Larry Savage think about the county's SPLOST?? The county has done a fabulous job since the 1980s delivering these much needed projects. AND the two CIDs have done a fabulous job leveraging their self-imposed tax for infrastructure improvements.
Larry makes it up
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July 19, 2012
Larry, Larry, Larry, you have not even won yet and you are already falsely charging the DOT of using funds from GA 400. One thing we don't need is a candidate who is not in tune with reality. Check your facts before you open your mouth and make silly charges. This is just the latest in a series you have made that turned out to be false.
StillStuck
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July 19, 2012
I am so glad I didn't vote for Savage, yesterday. A person on the county commission needs to have a basic understanding of public project finance and this display of ignorance makes me feel that much better about my vote.
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