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Committee advocates for Pantops pedestrian bridge

The Pantops Walkability Committee is hosting its first community meeting to discuss the need for a pedestrian bridge over Route 250 at Rolkin Road.

The committee, under the leadership of Diane Berlin, hopes retailers and residents in the Pantops area will support their vision for the proposed bridge, which would follow the Pantops master plan and make the area “an innovative and walkable community,” Berlin says.

“You take your life into your own hands,” she says about crossing Route 250 on foot. Calling the road “treacherous,” she says building a pedestrian bridge would reduce traffic by allowing people who live on one side to access the other’s retail and restaurant opportunities without ever getting behind the wheel.

A bridge similar to the one Berlin proposes at Rolkin Road already exists on Emmet Street.

Public input is welcome at the community meeting at the Broadus Memorial Baptist Church on Route 20 at 3pm on March 19.

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There’s hope yet for the pedestrian bridge over 250

Though building a pedestrian bridge over Route 250 at Rolkin Road may not be the Albemarle Board of Supervisors’ first priority, the proposal hasn’t gone unnoticed.

With about 350 to 400 names on petitions advocating for the bridge and a large showing of supporters at the November 11 meeting, Pantops Community Advisory Committee member Diane Berlin says the supes gave her project a lot of attention.

“We’re in the mix,” Berlin says. “They get it.”

For now, though, supervisors say improving the safety in county schools—a project that was initiated after the shootings at Sandy Hook—takes priority.

They did approve, however, a study to find a permanent location for the pedestrian bridge and fundraising, which will begin next year, according to Berlin.

While VDOT could match funds up to $10 million for the bridge, the supervisors applauded communities in other jurisdictions that fundraised their own projects.

Berlin is skeptical. “If you ask the citizens for 10 or 20 dollars,” she says, “there’s no way they’re going to come up with a million dollars.”

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Up and over: Why some are begging for a bridge

Route 250, deemed a traffic nightmare by drivers of the 32,000 cars that travel it daily, virtually splits residential neighborhoods on one side and businesses on the other. Some think the next step for Albemarle should be building a walkway across the busy highway—because most pedestrians fear crossing the street on foot, but would prefer not driving their cars one-tenth of a mile to get to the grocery store.

“It’s insanely dangerous. My colleagues and I will sometimes try to walk across the street to get a coffee or lunch and it’s like running a gauntlet,” says Debby Norton, a Mountaintop Montessori teacher. “I mean, really dangerous. Like an agility test, but losing means death.”

Diane Berlin, a Pantops Community Advisory Committee member, tells a similar story.

“You can’t cross it,” says Berlin. “You take your life into your own hands.” Calling the road “treacherous,” she says building a pedestrian bridge would reduce traffic by allowing people who live on one side to access the other’s retail and restaurant opportunities without ever getting behind the wheel. Norton sees this as a way to reduce carbon emissions, too.

Berlin learned from Ken Boyd, the Rivanna District supervisor, that there may already be funds for this type of project—but only if she acts quickly. Projects hoping to get money from the county’s capital improvement plan are being presented to the Board of Supervisors on November 11.

Rather than a crosswalk, Boyd advises a type of grade-separated interchange like a bridge because the Virginia Department of Transportation would ultimately prefer to keep traffic moving. VDOT could match funds raised for a project like this, he says, making it an attractive one for the board to consider.

Before she started heavily advocating for the addition, Berlin scheduled a tour of a similar bridge across Wards Road in Lynchburg.

“It was beautiful and minimal,” she says, adding that the bridge took up very little land on both sides and its 110 feet stretched across four traffic lanes and a median, much like the structure of Rolkin Road where she’s proposing the bridge in Albemarle. Also, the Lynchburg bridge features stairs and an elevator on one side and stairs and exit ramps on the other, making it handicap accessible and also suitable for pet-walkers. According to Berlin, the bridge was built from inception to completion in only six months with Wards Road only being closed for one night. She thinks this bridge makes a perfect model.

At the Board of Supervisors’ meeting where Berlin will formally propose the bridge, other people and organizations will pitch a number of projects to the board. Berlin’s proposal, though, follows the Pantops Master Plan, which was adopted in March 2008.

“Make the neighborhood center a major pedestrian destination with sidewalk improvements, including a pedestrian crossing at Rolkin Road with sidewalks leading from adjacent residential areas into the center,” reads the plan. And while a similar, but shorter, pedestrian crossing bridge at UVA cost about $3.6 million, Berlin says the model bridge in Lynchburg was only about $1.8 million.

With positive feedback from Boyd and the Planning Commission, Berlin will present the project to the Board of Supervisors on November 11 at 5:30pm at the Albemarle County Office Building. She urges other Pantoppers who support the project to attend.