9 years ago, I had 100’s of engineering friends and acquaintances from 100’s of different engineering firms. Now they all work for Jacobs Engineering... FUBO
Unusual Activity Spotted in Jacobs Engineering Group Inc (JEC)Aaron
Hope the Feds take a look into insider trading...
I-84 in Connecticut is going to be fixed, but when is the question...
BTT
And in April, the Maryland Department of Transportation awarded a $100 million contract to a 16-member design-build team to come up with ways to improve traffic flow and ease congestion on Interstate 270 between Interstate 495 and Frederick, MD just outside Washington, DC. The state expects to use technology to give motorists real-time traffic information in its quest to cut average travel time by 30 minutes.
I’ll do it for them for a lot less than $100 million. Here are the main problems with I-270’s northern portion (in the area of Frederick).
Problem 1: it drops from as many as six lanes EACH WAY in the southern portion to a mere two each way. In other words, two-thirds of its capacity — but less than two-thirds of its traffic — goes away before it reaches its northern terminus.
Problem 2: the two lanes of I-270 northbound join with the three lanes of I-70 westbound to continue as I-70 further west — with just two lanes each way. So yeah, five lanes of traffic feeding into two.
Short-term solutions: (1) add a third lane each way on I-270 all the way up to Frederick, and have that lane be an “exit only” onto U.S. 15 northbound serving Frederick itself and points north. (2) add a third lane each way on I-70 westbound at least as far as I-81 to Hagerstown, and preferably as far as where I-68 splits off I-70 in Hancock.
OK, I’ll take my consultant check now.