On February 10, 2021

VTrans funds Center Street scoping study

By Brett Yates

The Vermont Agency of Transportation will provide a grant worth $28,800 to Rutland City for a “scoping study” that will examine potential permanent improvements on Center Street between Wales Street and Merchants Row. The Rutland Board of Aldermen authorized the mayor to sign the grant agreement at a Feb. 1 meeting.

The announcement of the VTrans grant, for which the city submitted a bid in September, came two weeks after the Rutland Redevelopment Authority received permission to apply for yet another state grant that, with any luck, will pay for a second round of seasonal alterations on Center Street, where outdoor dining decks, planters, public art, and other removable features enlivened downtown last summer.

Looking further down the road, the VTrans grant, by contrast, will go toward envisioning a full, year-round reconfiguration of the block, which may incorporate some of the features from the temporary makeover.

Rutland’s grant application called the existing design of Center Street “antiquated and dangerous,” with wide travel lanes that encourage speeding, an excess of parking for cars, and sidewalks that don’t meet ADA requirements. While the pilot program in 2020 narrowed the street’s two automobile lanes, the city would also like to review one-way and pedestrian-only configurations.

According to RRA Executive Director Brennan Duffy, it’ll take about “a month and half” for the city to select a vendor to sketch out the possibilities. The consultants’ work could last as long as a year, but Duffy hopes to have a finished study sometime this fall, following “several public engagement meetings.”

A survey by the Rutland Regional Planning Commission suggested that 88% of Rutlanders approved of the provisional redesign of Center Street, which encouraged the city to look into a full-time transformation.

“The feeling was that that was successful and well-received, and we’ll try to get an idea of the cost and finalize a design that would be potentially implemented,” Duffy said.

Do you want to submit feedback to the editor?

Send Us An Email!

Related Posts

Killington 1970s skiers reunite at Charity’s 1887 Saloon to celebrate lifelong memories, adventures, and cherished friendships at Charity’s 1887 Saloon

October 17, 2024
By Victoria Gaither Saturday, Oct. 19, at 2 p.m.—KILLINGTON— Charity’s 1887 Saloon will be the scene for the Killington 1970s Reunion social event. The event came about after organizer Jack Oliver attended his 50th high school reunion. Oliver explained, “I had never attended one before and was always reluctant to do so but enjoyed it.”…

Vermont Adaptive Ski and Sports seeks winter volunteer-instructors

October 17, 2024
Instructor training begins in November for skiing, snowboarding and winter sports KILLINGTON — Vermont Adaptive Ski and Sports, the largest year-round disabled sports nonprofit organization in Vermont to offer daily, year-round sports and recreation for people with disabilities, is looking for energetic winter volunteer-instructors who have a dedicated passion for sports and who want to…

Enter to win the 2025 Vermont Writers’ Prize

October 17, 2024
Annual prizes for poetry and prose celebrating Vermont are awarded by Green Mountain Power and Vermont Magazine. Winning entries in each category are published in the summer issue of Vermont Magazine and receive $1,250. The deadline to enter is Jan. 1, 2025. Entries are open for the 2025 Vermont Writers’ Prize, awarded each year in…

There’s no place like the stage: twists, turns, and punchlines from Vermont to Hollywood and back again – Nick Wevursky explains

October 17, 2024
Nick Wevursky, a standup comic in Rutland County, has always had a talent for finding humor in everyday life. Growing up across small towns in the Green Mountain state, he balanced activities like tending horse farms and snowboarding at Stratton, where his sister was a pro. Even as a kid, he loved making people laugh,…