For Immediate Release:
September 5, 2007 |
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James White Parkway Will Be Closed For First UT Home
Game
Several Alternative Routes Available
Knoxville, TN. – The Tennessee Department of Transportation (TDOT) would
like to remind football fans traveling from northeast Tennessee to the
University of Tennessee football game against Southern Mississippi on
Saturday, September 8, that James White Parkway (JWP) is closed for
reconstruction. Fans traveling to the game are encouraged to allow extra
time getting in and out of the downtown Knoxville area. UT home games
normally attract more than 100,000 fans.
The most direct route for those motorists traveling from the northeast
Tennessee area is to exit I-40 west bound onto the new Hall of Fame Drive
(exit 389) to get to the stadium. Knoxville Area Transit (KAT) provides
convenient shuttle service to the stadium from the Knoxville Coliseum
parking garages adjacent to Hall of Fame Drive.
There are several other routes from the Tri-cities area motorists can take
into downtown Knoxville. Westbound motorists on I-40 can also take Exit 387B
(17th Street) or Exit 386B (Alcoa Highway/US129) to Cumberland Avenue or
Neyland Drive, to get to campus and downtown.
JWP has been closed since December 2006 for the demolition and
reconstruction of several ramps, bridges and roadways as part of the
continuing SmartFIX 40 project. The parkway is expected to reopen by the end
of September.
SmartFIX40 is an accelerated construction process involving the complete
closure of a primary roadway to allow around-the-clock work that is
uninterrupted by traffic in order to dramatically shorten construction time,
thereby reducing the long-term inconvenience to motorists.
During the SmartFIX40 project, I-40 traffic through Knoxville will be
rerouted onto I-640 for 14 months beginning in the spring of 2008. Local
traffic will have access to downtown at all times during this closure. The
closure of I-40 will avoid more than two years of traffic delays, lane
closures and other frustrations by allowing construction crews to work on
roadways and bridges without traffic.
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