Route 3: Finally safe?

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About a half-dozen recommended safety improvements to a two-lane section of Route 3 in the Stevensburg area are complete, a Virginia Department of Transportation spokesman said this week.

Initiated after a quadruple fatality two-car crash near Clay Hill Road in March, area residents and legislators pressed VDOT to examine what could be done to make the road safer. The safety improvements were completed on schedule in mid-November, VDOT Culpeper District spokesman Lou Hatter said.

The improvements include wider, paved shoulders, a centerline rumble strip, embedded reflective markers that are safe for snowplows, flexible warning posts to mark the edge of the roadway, extra-wide pavement markings, rumble strips across the travel lanes at the beginning of the curve and stop bars at five intersecting roadways in the curve area to better delineate where the intersecting roads meet Route 3.

“We’re trying to give people as many visual clues as we can that they’re entering a curve,” said Hatter.

The studies, engineering, traffic analysis and construction were estimated to cost $291,000. Hatter said to date, VDOT has spent $158,082 on the project. However, Hatter said that figure could change, as some project charges are still pending.

Most of Route 3, the main highway linking Culpeper and Fredericksburg, is four lanes, except for the section near Stevensburg and a short section near town limits.

At several meetings initiated by area residents in the wake of the fatal March accident, local and state legislators and VDOT leaders acknowledged that the ideal solution would be to four-lane the remaining two lane section of the highway. But the money to do that — an estimated $18 million — isn’t available, say officials. Hatter agreed.

“The ideal long-term solution would be to complete the four-laning of Route 3, that’s what we’d be looking for in the long run, but there’s no likelihood that that’s going to happen in the near term,” he said.

Short of adding lanes to the highway, Hatter said another possible improvement on the horizon is adding three foot wide shoulders from the curve headed east to the four-lane section at Lignum.
“We’re looking for funding for that right now,” he said.

During the safety meetings, VDOT and law enforcement officials also stressed that unsafe and inattentive driver behaviors also factor into the accidents reported in the curve area. Earlier this year, a VDOT official said a speed study showed 85 percent of drivers were exceeding the posted 55 mph speed limit.

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Reader Reactions

Flag Comment Posted by WayneS on December 22, 2009 at 4:03 pm

“It kinds of leads me to believe the problem never was the highway.“

I think you are 100% correct.

Flag Comment Posted by El Debibble on December 20, 2009 at 8:50 am

I drive that road all the time, day and night and average about 10MPH over the speed limit. I have never had a problem with that highway.  It kinds of leads me to believe the problem mever was the highway.

Flag Comment Posted by Sandalwood on December 18, 2009 at 9:38 am

The device hasn’t been invented yet that will make people pay attention to their driving and not do a host of other things at the same time.

Flag Comment Posted by Igottagetalife on December 18, 2009 at 7:41 am

Folks looking at the article and the road and what were done?  To list what was done indentations made to wake drivers up if they cross on the shoulders or center line. Reduction of speed to 50 mph through the turn and warnings of the reduction, and shoulders improved all great improvements right?

First, that slow turn is fairly wide and visible and actually easy to drive and to someone’s point here unless you are distracted, driving carelessly or think you’ll live forever regardless.

In my opinion all of it done so the driver thinks while going through the turn. If that’s what you call fixing the problem I think we just spent a lot of money and very little return if any. Yes you can say if it saves one life it was worth it, then fine we should reduce speed all over the place and carve out the blacktop everywhere?

The accidents will still happen if the design was bad, but to be honest without going into the details of each accident, it seems we are simply saying, be a defensive driver and aware of what’s going on. Is that the driver’s responsibility anyway? I find what was done useless and a waste of money. The only improvement that would be finite would be to two-lane the road with a median strip or barrier in the middle. I know the cost of that is over kill but otherwise accidents will continue to happen and just be more spectacular although maybe slightly more rare….maybe.

Flag Comment Posted by bigmom40 on December 18, 2009 at 12:32 am

It is about time after what 8 to 10 people had to died first before the road was even fixed.should have been fixed after the first kid died!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Flag Comment Posted by rogersk on December 17, 2009 at 2:15 pm

thank you, wowman…Apology accepted

Flag Comment Posted by Wowman on December 17, 2009 at 1:31 pm

Apology directed to rogersk, sorry for the confusion.

My comments were for sandalwood and sandalwood alone.

Flag Comment Posted by rogersk on December 17, 2009 at 12:46 pm

How did we get on the schools anyway?  I thought this forum was on improvements to route 3.

Flag Comment Posted by rogersk on December 17, 2009 at 12:44 pm

PS:  number three:  I don’t make remarks about your local school system, other than to say that I, and my children, attended Culpeper County schools. Since we are no longer there I don’t feel qualified to make comments about the schools. I can only hope they are as good as the ones in the county where I now live and my grandson and his wife are both teachers.

Flag Comment Posted by rogersk on December 17, 2009 at 12:37 pm

wowman…I don’t know about whom you’re talking..Not me.  Number one, I’ve never made a remark like that and number two. I am far, far from Meadowbrook.

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