Baking up a new street
Lolita Harper
The line of brake lights in the evening gives an eerie illumination to
the beaten asphalt and massive machines being used to repave a stretch of
Baker Street in Costa Mesa.
Major construction on a half-mile portion of Baker -- from Fairview
Road to Harbor Boulevard -- will tear out that section of the street and
replace it with new, more shock-friendly pavement, officials said. The
$1-million project, which also includes a one-block section of Fairview
from Newport Boulevard to Wilson Street, will continue for about three
months, Costa Mesa Assistant City Engineer Ernesto Munoz said.
“The pavement surface has outlived its use,” Munoz said.
All Costa Mesa streets must undergo a major overhaul such as this one
every 20 to 50 years depending on maintenance. The more maintenance, the
longer the road’s life, he said. Baker was last fixed about 10 years ago.
Traffic on Baker is limited to one lane each way, and the lines of
cars run the length of the block during rush hour.
No turns were permitted off Baker for westbound traffic on Wednesday
morning, making it nearly impossible to access Logan Avenue, which runs
parallel to the construction site. McClintock Way and College Drive
serves as bookends to Logan and both were blocked Wednesday morning.
Margy Floyd, manager of Rockreation Sport Climbing Center at 1300
Logan Ave., said the construction has not affected business because the
center does not rely on foot traffic. Most patrons are members or have
reservations, so they will find a way to get there, Floyd said.
But the street improvements have altered Floyd’s commute. Floyd said
she was forced to turn left on Harbor, then left onto Village Way, left
on College Drive and finally right on Logan Avenue.
“It was a pain to get here,” she said.
Munoz said construction should not block access to surrounding streets
under normal circumstances, but temporary restrictions may occur to move
machinery. Construction creates some inconvenience, but the results will
improve the traffic flow come May.
In addition to resurfacing the street, construction crews will also
fix portions of the curb, gutter and ramps that have been uplifted by
tree roots or the soil. Most of the city’s soil is clay-based and expands
when it gets wet, Munoz said. Costa Mesa streets take an extra beating
during the rainy season because of it, officials say.
“It swells like a sponge when it gets wet and the pressure from the
clay brakes up the concrete,” Munoz said.
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